Bulletin Daily Paper 11/11/12

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November 11, 2012

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VETERANS DAY WEEKEND The affair: CIA Director David Petraeus and Paula Broadwell, an Army Reserve officer.

Personal emails vs. national security The Washington Post and New York Times The beginning of the end came for CIA Director David Petraeus when Paula Broadwell, a younger married woman with whom he was having an affair, “or someone close to her had sought access to his email,” according to the Wall Street Journal’s description of an FBI probe. Associates of Petraeus had received “anonymous harassing emails” that were then traced to Broadwell, ABC’s Martha Raddatz reported, suggesting she may have found their names or addresses in his email. The email account was apparently Petraeus’ personal Gmail, not his official CIA email. That’s a big deal: Some of the most powerful foreign spy agencies in the world would love to have an opening, however small, into the personal email account of the man who runs the United States’ spy service. See Email / A6

2012 is the year of the math major

A preview of Central Oregon’s 4 parades • A travel writer’s journey through Oregon’s memorials • Page C1

36 days at Iwo Jima • ‘A terrible sight’: Years later, seminal events of WWII are etched into a Bend Marine’s mind

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Lorin Myring, a World War II veteran, laughs while discussing his time in the service in his room at Stone Lodge Retirement Home on Friday. But Myring has seen some terrible things. The now-87-year-old was just 19 when the Battle of Iwo Jima began (at left, he’s pictured in 1945), and later, he spent time in Nagasaki after the atomic bombing. Today, he visits schools and tells stories from his experiences. By Ben Botkin The Bulletin

Myring kept this photo published earlier in The Bulletin; it’s of the young Marine in 1945. He said he enlisted in the Corps because he liked the uniform.

By Seth Borenstein

he Battle of Iwo Jima is etched in Lorin Myring’s memory. Myring, at the time a corporal in the Marine Corps’ Fifth Division, went ashore in the first wave that stormed the South Pacific island during World War II. The 36-day battle against the Japanese Imperial Army for control of the island in 1945 was key to the U.S. air war against Japan. U.S. planes on bombing runs to Tokyo faced fire from Japanese forces based on the island. Myring, now 87 and living in Bend, is among the younger of the remaining veterans of Iwo Jima; he went into the battle as a 19-year-old from Minneapolis. Much was unknown. Briefed before the mission, the troops were told the island could be taken with-

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in 48 hours, he recalled. By then, aerial forces had bombarded Iwo Jima for 72 days before the ground invasion. As a result, the Marines hoped to find weakened forces. But it was not to be. “They didn’t know there were caves and there were tunnels five stories down and they had interconnected tunnels 16 miles long all over the island,” Myring said. The tunnels cut through hot, sulfurous rock underneath black pumice sand, large enough for soldiers to run upright, with a path brightened by electric lights, according to the book “I’m Staying With My Boys.” Written by Jim Proser and Jerry Cutter, the book told the story of Sgt. John Basilone, a Marine who died at Iwo Jima after destroying an enemy blockhouse. Hundreds of Marines died the first day on the beach, Feb. 19, 1945. See Marine / A8

The Associated Press

Forget political pundits, gut instincts and psychics. The mightierthan-ever silicon chip seems to reveal the future. In just two weeks this fall, computer models displayed an impressive prediction prowess. It started when the first computer model alerted meteorologists to the pre-Halloween disaster headed for the Northeast from a bunch of clouds in the Caribbean. Nearly a week later, that weather system became Hurricane Sandy and grew into a superstorm after taking a once-in-a-century sharp turn into New Jersey. Then came the election, and data galore. See Numbers / A8

SUNDAY

We use recycled newsprint

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Revival for the veteran jobs bill

3 days to mark a number of wars Saturday marked the first of what is three days of Veterans Day commemorations across the United States. The holiday falls on a Sunday this year, and the federal observance is on Monday. It’s a chance to thank those who stormed the beaches during World War II — a population that is rapidly shrinking, with most of those former troops now in their 80s and 90s.

At the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, a steady stream of visitors arrived Saturday morning as the names of the 58,000 people on the wall were being read over a loudspeaker. And it’s the first Veterans Day weekend honoring those in uniform since the last U.S. troops left Iraq in December 2011. Source: The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — On Tuesday, the day after the government observes Veterans Day, Congress will return to Washington to start the lame-duck session. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., said he hopes the holiday will remind his colleagues of the service of men and women in the military and the country’s obligation to pass the Veterans IN D.C. Jobs Corps Act. Senate Republicans blocked passage of the act in September because of debt concerns. “It’s unbelievable that the Senate couldn’t pass the veterans jobs bill because of a filibuster,” he said. “The election’s over. Let’s come right back and pass this.” The bill focuses on veterans returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan and finding it hard to find work in a struggling economy. The percentage of unemployed post-9/11 veterans has generally decreased since January 2010 but still remains higher than the national average. In September, the unemployment rate for female Iraq and Afghanistan veterans jumped to 19.7 percent from 12.1 percent the month before, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In September 2011, it was 14.7 percent. The bill would provide $1 billion over five years to train post-9/11 veterans for jobs as police and firefighters and conservation work in national parks and historic preservation projects. See Jobs / A4

One man who made the moon landing possible By Leslie Minora The Dallas Morning News

DALLAS — Art Roberts, a 30year-old electrical engineer, huddled around the TV in a Richardson, Texas, apartment with his wife and two other couples on July 20, 1969. Like millions around the world, they had stayed up late to watch Neil Armstrong’s one

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small step, mankind’s one giant leap. The grainy, dreamlike images of the moon landing are forever seared in Americans’ memories, and the broadcast of the lunar landing meant success for the U.S. and success for NASA. November is a big month for smaller lunar landings, of the probe variety, and Roberts’ own success helped make it all possible.

Inside • The space shuttles’ final resting places, A2

As an engineer for Collins Radio, a communications technology company contracted by NASA to establish outer space communications systems, Roberts was one of an army of people be-

INDEX Business Books Classified

G1-6 F4-6 E1-6

Community C1-8 Crosswords C7, E2 Local News B1-6

Milestones Obituaries Opinion

TODAY’S WEATHER C6 B4 F1-3

Oregon News B3 Sports D1-6 TV & Movies C2

Snow possible High 44, Low 31 Page B6

hind the scenes who pushed the U.S. to the lead in the space race. The system he and his team developed at Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex in California made the lunar landing possible. And it is part of the reason people experienced Armstrong walking and talking in real time. See Moon / A4

TOP NEWS GOP: Fall in line, Boehner says, A3 OCCUPY: Aid for Sandy victims, A4


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

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TODAY

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

Now on land, once in space (or not) N ASA’s space shuttles have rolled out of their hangars and into museums. They aren’t alone. For 35 years, NASA’s only full-length shuttle trainer was used to familiarize astronauts with life in space. But with the shuttle program over, the Full Fuselage Trainer has moved to the Museum of Flight in Seattle, and it began its new role this weekend: teaching the public about how NASA readies its crews for launch, in the past and maybe in the future. The full-size shuttle trainer was used for three decades by more than 350 astronauts. Now just about everyone can board it; museum visitors can access the payload bay, the crew compartment and the flight deck. Earlier this month, the last of the space shuttles to fly, Atlantis, became the last to move to its new retirement home, just 10 miles away at Kennedy Space Center’s main tourist site. Below is a summary of the shuttles in the order they flew and the places they ended up:

Enterprise: A shuttle prototype used in jetlinerdrop tests over Edwards Air Force Base in California in 1977, it never flew in space. Originally on display at a Smithsonian Institution hangar in Virginia, Enterprise was flown to New York City in April and moved into the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum in June. It suffered minor damage to the vertical stabilizer (or tail) from Superstorm Sandy.

Jordan Stead / The Associated Press

The Full Fuselage Trainer shuttle wasn’t designed for travel. Built in the 1970s almost entirely out of plywood, the 47-foot-tall trainer was taken apart, shrink-wrapped and reassembled at its new home in Seattle.

Columbia: Destroyed during descent on Feb. 1, 2003 — killing all seven astronauts — Columbia flew 28 missions stretching back to 1981. The wreckage is stored in NASA’s Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center for research purposes. Challenger: Destroyed during launch on Jan. 28, 1986 — killing all seven aboard — Challenger flew 10 missions dating to 1983. The wreckage is buried in a pair of abandoned missile silos at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

Discovery: This shuttle moved to a Smithsonian Institution hangar in Northern Virginia in April after 39 missions dating to 1984. Atlantis: On Nov. 2, this shuttle moved to the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Center after 33 missions stretching back to 1985. Endeavour: The replacement for shuttle Challenger was flown to Los Angeles in September and moved into the California Science Center in October after 25 missions dating to 1992.

It’s Sunday, Nov. 11, the 316th day of 2012. There are 50 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS • Today is Veterans Day in the United States, Remembrance Day in Canada. Formerly Armistice Day, it marks the end of World War I. The U.S. federal holiday is observed on Monday this year. A1, C1

IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1889, Washington became the 42nd state. In 1909, President William Howard Taft took the first steps to make Pearl Harbor the principal U.S. naval station in the Pacific. In 1918, fighting in World War I came to an end with the signing of an armistice between the Allies and Germany. In 1921, the remains of an unidentified American service member were interred in a Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. In 1932, a new tomb was dedicated. In 1966, Gemini 12 blasted off from Cape Kennedy with astronauts James Lovell and Buzz Aldrin aboard. In 1972, the U.S. Army turned over its base at Long Binh to the South Vietnamese, symbolizing the end of direct U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War. In 1992, the Church of England voted to ordain women as priests. Ten years ago: Iraqi lawmakers denounced a tough, new U.N. resolution on weapons inspections as dishonest and provocative. Five years ago: Marking his fifth Veterans Day since the Iraq invasion, President George W. Bush honored troops at a tearful ceremony in Texas. One year ago: Heralding the end of one war and the drawdown of another, President Barack Obama observed Veterans Day at Arlington National Cemetery by urging Americans to hire the thousands of servicemen and women coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan. A gunman armed with an assault rifle fired a series of shots at the White House from long range; suspect Oscar Ramiro Ortega-Hernandez is charged with the attempted assassination of the president.

BIRTHDAYS Dancer-choreographer Nicholas Royce is 87. Comedian Jonathan Winters is 87. Country singer Narvel Felts is 74. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., is 72. Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega is 67. Golfer Fuzzy Zoeller is 61. Actress Demi Moore is 50. Actress Calista Flockhart is 48. Actor Frank John Hughes is 45. Actor David DeLuise is 41. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio is 38. NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez is 26. — From wire reports

Sources: The Associated Press, NASA, NWCN.com, NBCNews.com

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NEWS Q&A Given the track of recent Q: hurricanes like Sandy this year and Irene in 2011, one wonders, what’s the farthest north a hurricane has hit the United States? Three major hurricanes have hit as far north as Massachusetts, according to the National Weather Service’s National Hurricane Center. These were Storm 6 in 1869, the Great New England Hurricane of 1938 (aka the Long Island Express) and Hurricane Edna in 1954. Storm 6 killed a person in Massachusetts and knocked out all the telegraph lines between Boston and New York. The Great New England Hurricane killed between 700 and 800 people and caused $308 million in damage in New York and New England. It made landfall as a Category 3 hurricane, and Blue Hill Observatory, about 10 miles south of Boston, measured winds of 121 mph with gusts up to 183 mph. The storm destroyed 25,000 cars, half the area’s apple crop and knocked down up to 2 billion trees, according to a study by Scott Mandia, a professor at Suffolk County Community College in New York. On Sept. 11, 1954, Edna hit New England, which was still recovering from Hurricane Carol, which had blazed a similar path just off the East Coast and had smacked Long Island and Connecticut on Aug. 30. Edna, a Category 3 hurricane, was responsible for a total of 29 deaths and $42 million in damage. In Maine alone, it caused eight deaths and $15 million in damage.

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Do you have a question about nation or world news? Submit it to Cox News Service editors in Atlanta at q&a@ajc.com. Include name, phone and city.

other benefits, including a Secret Service detail and expenses to cover the cost of an office, a staff and travel. Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush collectively received about $3.8 million from taxpayers in fiscal year 2011, the Los Angeles Times reported in March. Former presidents receive the pension and expenses no matter how much they make in speaking fees. George W. Bush has made about $15 million since leaving office and Clinton earned $13.4 million for giving speeches in 2011, according to CNN. Former first ladies receive $20,000 a year if they are widowed.

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Is the president of the Q: United States eligible for a government pension? If so, how much is it and does his time in office (one term versus two) influence the amount of the pension? The Former Presidents Act of 1958 was passed by Congress and signed by President Dwight Eisenhower to provide an annual lifetime pension to former U.S. presidents, after Harry Truman struggled to find the money to pay a staff needed to handle his mail, appointments and speeches after leaving office. The amount, which originally was $25,000 a year, is set annually by Congress and is currently $199,700, according to the U.S. Office of Personnel Management. It goes into effect when a president leaves office and is paid whether a president serves one or two terms. Former presidents also receive

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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T S U.S. calls off Middle East nuclear talks

AFGHAN MASSACRE

Grisly account at GI’s hearing New York Times News Service JOINT BASE LEWIS-McCHORD, Wash. — Through a live video feed from half a world away in Afghanistan, in an extraordinary night court session, descriptions of chaos and horror poured into a military courtroom here. Staring into the camera, Mullah Khamal Adin, 39, described the 11 members of his cousin’s family he found dead in the family compound — most of the bodies burned in a pile in one room. Adin, in a hearing that started here late Friday, was asked about the smell. Was there an odor of gasoline or kerosene? Just

bodies and burned plastic, he replied through a translator. The Army’s preliminary hearing in the case against Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians in Kandahar province this year, unfolded last week mostly in the daylight of a working military base an hour south of Seattle. But to accommodate witnesses in Afghanistan, and the 121⁄2-hour time difference, the schedule was shifted, with testimony through cameras and uplinks in Afghanistan. The military says Bales, 39, was serving his fourth combat tour overseas when he walked

away from his remote outpost in southern Afghanistan and shot and stabbed members of several families in a nighttime ambush on two villages. At least nine of the people he is accused of killing were children. Asked to describe the injuries, another witness said: “Everybody was shot on the head. … I didn’t pay attention to the rest of the wounds.” The attacks, which occurred on March 11 in a deeply poor rural region while most of the victims were asleep, were the deadliest war crime attributed to a single U.S. soldier in the decade of war that has followed the 9/11 attacks.

The Associated Press

In this courtroom sketch, U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, seated, watches testimony via a video link from Afghanistan at a military base south of Seattle. Bales is accused of murder in a predawn attack on two villages in Kandahar province in March. Victims’ relatives testified late Friday night; most of what was said, however graphic, was circumstantial, pointing to a lone American gunman but not directly implicating Bales.

AFTER THE ELECTION

Speaker gives House GOP a shove words of support — even a few who had been a thorn in the New York Times News Service speaker’s side. WASHINGTON — On a conIt was a striking contrast to ference call with House Repub- a similar call last year, when licans a day after the party’s Boehner tried to persuade electoral battering last week, members to compromise on a Speaker John Boehner deal to extend a tempodished out some bitter rary cut in payroll taxmedicine, and for the es, only to have them first time in the 112th loudly revolt. Congress, most memWith the president rebers took their dose. elected and Democrats Their party lost bad- Boehner cementing their control ly, Boehner said, and of the Senate, Boehner while Republicans would con- will need to capitalize on the tinue to control the House and chastened faction of the House staunchly oppose tax rate in- GOP that wants to cut a deal to creases as Congress grapples avert sudden tax increases and with the impending fiscal bat- across-the-board spending tle, they had to avoid the nasty cuts in January that could send showdowns that marked so the nation’s economy back into much of the last two years. recession. After spending two Members on the call, sub- years marooned between the dued and dark, murmured will of his loud and fractious By Jonathan Weisman and Jennifer Steinhauer

More election analysis • Examining what commentators call the “second-term curse,” F1

members and the Democratic Senate majority, the speaker is trying to assert control, and many members seem for now to be offering their support. “To have a voice at the bargaining table, John Boehner has to be strong,” said Oklahoma Rep. Tom Cole, one of the speaker’s lieutenants. Aides say this is an altered political landscape that Boehner did not expect. As a result, whether the nation can avoid the so-called fiscal cliff will depend not only on whether Boehner can find common cause with a newly re-elected, invigorated Barack Obama, but also whether he

In Cabinet shuffle, Rice, Lew top picks

In immigration debate, new push for citizenship

Bulletin wire reports Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is emerging as the favored candidate to succeed Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, even with the political controversy over her remarks about the fatal attack on the American diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, being related to an anti-Islam video. Six officials, insisting on anonymity, said Rice remains close to President Barack Obama and shares many of his views on foreign policy. They emphasized that the president hasn’t made a final decision, and Clinton may remain in her post for some months into Obama’s second term. Officials said Obama’s first move will be choosing a successor to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. He also may need to find successors to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, the officials said. Rice is thought to be the president’s preferred choice at State over two other strong candidates, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry and National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, according to the current and former administration officials. Experts say the new Treasury secretary must bring sufficient clout to Capitol Hill to push through budget and tax deals, and enough stature to calm financial markets should they begin to melt down again. The name most discussed as Obama’s pick is Jack Lew, currently his chief of staff and a longtime Washington insider. Erskine Bowles, the former Bill Clinton aide who was co-chair of the president’s debt and deficit, commission is also mentioned.

By Peter Wallsten The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — A growing number of conservatives are softening their views on immigration in the wake of President Barack Obama’s dominating performance among Hispanic voters, giving new momentum to a yearslong push by advocates to legalize millions of illegal immigrants. Yet even as officials in both parties pledged to make overhauling immigration a top goal in the coming months, it has become clear the issue remains thorny for each side. House Speaker John Boehner was criticized by some in his party for a Thursday interview in which he endorsed passing a “comprehensive” plan, adopting the language of immigrant advocates pushing for citizenship. By the time Boehner faced reporters for a Friday news conference, his remarks were more tepid, focusing primarily on the border-security theme that is more comfortable terrain for Republicans. “I’m not talking about a 3,000-page bill,” he said. “What I’m talking about is a common sense, step-by-step approach (that) would secure our borders, allow us to enforce the laws and fix a broken immigration system.” Pressed on whether he would ever support giving illegal immigrants the chance to be citizens, the speaker demurred: “I’m not going to get into any of the details of how you would get there. It’s just time to get the job done.” The issue promises to also be complicated for Obama and his fellow Democrats, who will face unprecedented pressure from a newly empowered political base to secure a complete victory, citizenship path and all. Hispanic leaders decided to support Obama’s re-election despite what they considered his broken 2008 campaign pledge to push immigration in his first term, but now several major organizations are planning an extensive grass-roots

push next year to pressure White House officials. “They understand they can’t make that promise twice in a lifetime,” said Eliseo Medina, secretary-treasurer of the Service Employees International Union, which spent millions recruiting new Hispanic voters this year. “For the White House and the Democrats, we don’t want to hear any more, ‘We’re with you but (the Republicans) won’t let me.’ That ain’t good enough anymore.”

Change of heart? The sudden burst of activity on the right and left reflects what activists describe as a sea change in the push for immigration legislation, which has been stymied since conservatives thwarted efforts by President George W. Bush to pursue an overhaul following his 2004 re-election. Unlike then, activists said Friday, many conservatives now see the danger of alienating Hispanic voters. And, in contrast to the Bush strategy, which focused on backroom negotiations on Capitol Hill, advocates have decided their best hope now is to apply outside pressure on skittish politicians in both parties. Supporters of a new law were thrilled Friday with the news that two prominent conservative thinkers, talk show host Sean Hannity and columnist Charles Krauthammer, both reported changing their minds to now support legalizing illegal immigrants. “Border fence plus amnesty. Yes, amnesty,” Krauthammer wrote, citing the word long used by conservative opponents of a path to citizenship. ” The post-election discussion on the right reflects a more fundamental shift that has been happening for months among several core Republican constituencies, with a growing number of evangelical leaders, business executives and law enforcement officials expressing support for legalizing immigrants.

Final election result: Florida stays blue The last state in the 2012 presidential race has been called, with Florida going narrowly to the president. The win means Barack Obama swept all of the most competitive states except North Carolina, and he walks away with a huge Electoral College win — 332 to 206 — despite carrying the popular vote by just 2.6 percent. (In 2008, Obama won 365 electoral votes.) Florida is the biggest swing-state prize, with 29 electoral votes. Obama won the state 50 to 49.1 percent. Had the margin been within half a percentage point, it would have triggered a computer recount. — From wire reports

can deliver his own caucus. The divide between Obama and Boehner appears wide. In their Saturday addresses, the president demanded immediate passage of a bill approved by the Senate that would extend the expiring Bush-era tax cuts for households earning less than $250,000, while Boehner

said raising tax rates on anyone would be unacceptable. But beneath the posturing, both men were keeping open avenues of negotiation. Obama was careful to call for more revenue, not higher tax rates, a demand that could be met by limiting tax deductions and credits, a path Boehner has accepted.

The Associated Press VIENNA — Attempts to find Arab-Israeli common ground on banning weapons of mass destruction in the Mideast have failed, and high-profile talks on the issue have been called off, diplomats said Saturday. Two diplomats said the United States, one of the organizers, would likely make a formal announcement saying that, with tensions in the region remaining high, “time is not opportune” for such a gathering. The diplomats were not authorized to divulge the cancellation. This year’s meeting was on shaky ground since it was agreed to in 2010 by the 189 member nations of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Its key sponsors were the U.S., Russia and Britain, but they said such a meeting was only possible if all countries — especially Israel —agreed to attend. The decision to postpone, if not to scrap it, will cast doubt on the significance of the treaty. Hopes for a meeting were alive as recently as Tuesday, when Iran joined Arab nations in saying it planned to attend, leaving Israel as the only undecided country.

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

To face challenges, Chinese Communists look back Occupy protesters find New York Times News Service BEIJING — As the Communist Party’s 18th Congress approached, Li Weidong, a scholar of politics, made plans to observe a historic leadership battle in one of the world’s great nations. Instead of staying in Beijing to monitor China’s once-a-decade transfer of power, Li boarded a plane. “I’m going to the United States to study the elections,� Li said in a telephone interview during a stopover in Paris. After witnessing the American presidential election Tuesday, Li went on the

radio for another interview. “I still think China’s politics remain prehistoric. I often joke that the Chinese civilization is the last prehistoric civilization left in the world.� With China at a critical juncture, there is a rising chorus within the elite expressing doubt that the 91-year-old Communist Party’s authoritarian system can deal with the stresses bearing down on the nation and its 1.3 billion people. Policies introduced after 1978 by Deng Xiaoping lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty and transformed the country

Moon Continued from A1 Now retired, Roberts, 73, recalls the excitement of that moment. “We were holding our breath,� he said, “for the people as well as the project.� Roberts didn’t set out for a career in outer space communications. He grew up in Lefors, a tiny town near Amarillo, and was the first in his family to attend college. At Texas Tech, he studied electrical engineering simply because he’d been told it was the most difficult major. It was a bonus that he enjoyed it. In the 1960s, microwave networks were expanding throughout the world, used by telephone companies and for government communications. Graduating in 1962, Roberts worked his way up with Collins Radio (now Rockwell Collins), climbing towers and aligning antennas for microwave communications systems around the world. At Collins, he met his wife, Bobbie, and she quit her job as secretary and traveled the world with him.

into the world’s second-largest economy. But the way party leaders have managed decades of growth has created towering problems that critics say can no longer be avoided. What is needed, they say, is a comprehensive strategy to gradually extricate the Communist Party, which has more than 80 million members, from its heavy-handed control of the economy, the courts, the news media, the military, educational institutions, civic life and just the plain day-to-day affairs of citizens. Only then, the critics argue,

can the government start to address the array of issues facing China, including rampant corruption, environmental degradation, and an aging population whose demographics have been skewed because of the one-child policy. For now, however, party leaders have given no indication that they intend to curb their role in government in a meaningful way. “We will never copy a Western political system,� Hu Jintao, the departing party chief, said in a speech Thursday opening the weeklong congress.

5IF (PMETUPOF BOUFOOB TZTUFN An engineer in Texas led the team that created a microwave system allowing for communications between Apollo astronauts and NASA — and the television-watching public. On the mountain, smaller back-to-back antennas (connected by waveguide, which is similar to cable) transmit signals between the 210-foot antenna and an 85-foot antenna at the Apollo Station. The antenna at Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex in Southern California transmits and receives signals from antennas in space.

From the Apollo Station, the signals are transmitted to NASA and television stations.

The back-to-back antennas were necessary to transmit the signal over a mountain that stood between the deep space antenna site and the Apollo Station. 4PVSDF %BMMBT .PSOJOH /FXT

that connected the 210-foot dish when they really needed it,â€? Roberts said. “You sit at home and watch TV with your fingers crossed.â€? ‘Like magic’ On that night, the video feed A few months before the shifted between Goldstone Apollo 10 manned spaceflight, and locations in Australia. a test-run for the Apollo 11 But most of the audio travlanding, NASA discovered it eled through the Goldstone needed a larger antenna to dif- microwave connection, said ferentiate between the lunar Bill Wood, a retired Apollo module’s radio signals and the tracking station engineer who background signals reflected consults with NASA on Apollo by the moon. history projects. That NASA set up a 210audio included Armfoot deep space antenna strong’s historic words, at Goldstone in Califor“That’s one small step nia’s Mojave Desert, but for man, one giant leap to be effective, it had for mankind.â€? to communicate with Roberts The video signal an 85-foot antenna at traveled through RobNASA’s Apollo Station several erts’ connection for the first miles away. Not only that, a few minutes of the broadcast, mountain stood between the until just before Armstrong two. stepped on the moon’s surface. Collins, which had previ- The quality of the video was ously contracted with NASA much stronger from Parkes, for space communications, Australia, so NASA made the was put on the job, and Rob- switch. The difference in qualerts led the team of engineers ity was due to the processing at Goldstone. of the signal, not the micro“It was pressure, but it’s wave connection. what you do,â€? Roberts said. He NASA historian Jennifer and his team established a sys- Ross-Nazzal estimates that 40 tem of two smaller antennas million U.S. households tuned atop the mountain. These two in for the first steps on the communicated with two simi- moon. “Just think about what lar antennas, one connected to our thoughts or ideas about the massive antenna, and one landing on the moon would to the smaller Apollo Station have been without TV or raantenna in an arrangement dio,â€? she said. “I don’t think it that Roberts says was “notori- would have been as meaningously hard to line up.â€? ful to Americans or as sensa“The Earth is moving and tional as it was.â€? turning,â€? he said. “The ability to track an object in space Vital communication While TV pumped up public from a moving point on Earth engagement, the microwave is pretty astounding.â€? Roberts adjusted the two connection at Goldstone also antennas on the mountain, transmitted more vital comloosening bolts, swinging the munications. NASA’s godishes back and forth, tighten- ahead command to land on ing bolts. He talked by radio the moon traveled through with people at receivers on the Roberts’ connection. “The extra gain of the large antenna ground. After months of planning, made it possible ‌ to say, ‘Go designing and building, they for landing,’ “ Wood said. The 210-foot antenna, with established the connection in its power to receive and differone intense afternoon. The technology “seems entiate signals more effectivelike magic,â€? said Eric Rothen- ly than the smaller antenna at buhler, dean and professor in the Apollo Station, was necesthe School of Communications sary to overcome communicaat Webster University in St. tion problems at that point in Louis. “On the one hand, it’s the mission. “Had we not used that mia very straightforward technological problem. ‌ On the crowave link to tie the other other hand, (the connection) antenna in, they would have enables a social and cultural waved off the mission, and moment that people remem- it would have never landed,â€? Wood said. ber their whole lives.â€? Roberts retired as a vice Back then, there were only three 210-foot NASA deep president at MCI in 1997. Since space antennas — in Cali- then, he’s remained active in fornia, Australia and Spain various community organi— built to ensure constant zations in Richardson, and in communication throughout 2002, he was named Citizen of the Year by the Richardson the Apollo missions. Chamber of Commerce. Fingers crossed Though the microwave But on the night of the Apol- connections have been gradulo 11 lunar landing, the stakes ally replaced by fiber optics, were highest. “Our part was the antennas set up by Robjust a small part in what I con- erts still stand at Goldstone. sider to be a huge project. ‌ They’re aging relics, conduits It just happened to be the one to numerous astronauts and

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spacecrafts. Roberts’ best friend of 45 years was with him the night of the moon landing and had no idea that the antennas Roberts engineered were involved. He was surprised to hear the news when they chatted recently. “Art was an engineer and he thought like an engineer, and it was all black-and-white thinking,� said Jim Jackson, a retired Richardson police officer. He describes Roberts as

modest and extremely driven, even to this day. On the night of the moon landing, Jackson recalls Roberts was quiet, “just watching.â€? Roberts recalls enjoying the night like everyone else. “It’s out of my hands at that point,â€? he said. But, he added, “we knew the whole thing was going over our system. ‌ I remember the step. The world was watching.â€?

new cause in Sandy aid

The Associated Press NEW YORK — The social media savvy that helped Occupy Wall Street protesters create a grass-roots global movement last year is proving to be a strength in the wake of Superstorm Sandy as members and organizers of the group fan out across New York to deliver aid including hot meals, medicine and blankets. They’re the ones who took food and water to Glenn Nisall, a 53-year-old resident of Queens’ hard-hit and isolated Rockaway section who lost power and lives alone, with no family nearby. “I said: ‘Occupy? You mean Occupy Wall Street?’� he said. “I said: ‘Awesome, man. I’m one of the 99 percent, you know?’� Occupy Wall Street was born in late 2011 in a lower Manhattan plaza called Zuccotti Park, with a handful of protesters vowing to stay put

until world leaders offered a fair share to the “99 percent� who don’t control the globe’s wealth. The movement collapsed under its leaderless format. But core members have persisted and found a new cause in Occupy Sandy. It started at St. Jacobi Church in Brooklyn the day after the storm, where Occupiers set up a base of operations and used social media like Twitter and Facebook to spread the word. Donations come in by the truckload and are sorted in the basement, which looks like a clearinghouse for every household product imaginable, from canned soup and dog food to duvet covers. “This is young people making history,� said Mark Naison, a professor at Fordham University who has been studying Occupy Wall Street. “Young people who are refusing to let people suffer.�

Jobs

come the threat of a Republican filibuster, the measure garnered only 58 votes, with five Republicans joining 51 Democrats and two independents in voting for it. As a vocal advocate for bringing home U.S. troops from Afghanistan as quickly as possible, Merkley said he feels a particular responsibility for making the transition back to civilian life as easy as possible. “This is a piece (of that) that is very important to me,� he said. Now that the election’s over, Merkley hopes more Republicans will support the measure. The bill will need to broaden its bipartisan support to advance. Even with the Democrats picking up two Senate seats in Tuesday’s election, they still fall two votes short of the 60 needed to break a filibuster, because both pickups replace Republican senators who voted for the bill in September.

Continued from A1 It would also authorize the Labor Department secretary to hold back funding from states unless they consider a veteran’s relevant military training when they apply for a commercial driver’s license or a certification in the medical field. To pay for the training, the Treasury Department would more aggressively collect large tax debts, including those owed by Medicare providers. But it authorizes collections over 10 years to pay for five years of funding, which prompted some Republicans to object to the potential increase to the national debt. “When we find ourselves in $16 trillion of debt and we pay for a five-year bill over 10 years, we make the problem worse,� Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., said on the Senate floor in September. Needing 60 votes to over-

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com


A6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

I B BBC chief resigns amid scandal LONDON — George Entwistle, the director general of the BBC, has resigned over a TV program it aired that wrongly implicated a British politician in a child sex-abuse scandal. In a brief statement outside BBC headquarters in London, Entwistle said Saturday night that he has decided to do the “honorable thing” and step down. “When appointed to the role, with 23 years’ experience as a producer and leader at the BBC, I was confident the trustees had chosen the best candidate for the post, and the right person to tackle the challenges and opportunities ahead,” he said. “However, the wholly exceptional events of the past few weeks have led me to conclude that the BBC should appoint a new leader.”

Syrian opposition seeks weapons DOHA, Qatar — The newly elected leader of Syria’s main opposition group slammed the international community for what he called inaction, saying Saturday that fighters are in desperate need of weapons to break the stalemate with President Bashar Assad’s forces. George Sabra’s comments came as his Syrian National Council struggled with other opposition groups to try to forge a cohesive and more representative leadership as rebels step up attacks against regime forces. Two suicide car bombers struck a military camp in the southern city of Daraa on Saturday, killing at least 20 government soldiers and prompting clashes in the area, activists said. Bombings targeting state security institutions have become frequent in recent months, raising Western fears that extremists fighting with the rebels could gain influence. The Council also resisted an initiative Saturday that would place all opponents of the government under one umbrella — a streamlining sought by foreign backers who fear that the bickering exile movements are being eclipsed by events on the battlegrounds in Syria.

Bluefin population is on the rebound DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — After defeating a proposal in 2010 to ban the export of an endangered fish that is a key ingredient of sushi, Japan and Asian nations argued it should be left to quota-setting international fisheries bodies to bring the species back from the brink. Two years on, their strategy for rebuilding stocks of Atlantic Bluefin tuna appears to be working. Thanks in part to a sharp reduction in the amount of fish legally caught, the bluefin population in the Atlantic is on the rebound though “the magnitude and speed of the increase vary considerably,” according to a stock assessment by scientists. — From wire reports

Petraeus’ fall from invincibility By Scott Shane, Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Peter Baker New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — David Petraeus’ “Rules for Living” appeared on The Daily Beast website on Monday, posted by his biographer, a fellow West Point graduate 20 years his junior named Paula Broadwell. The fifth rule, beneath his familiar portrait in full military regalia, began: “We all make mistakes. The key is to recognize them and admit them.” Petraeus took his own advice Friday and resigned as director of the CIA after admitting to an extramarital affair; officials identified the woman in question as Broadwell. The full back story is not yet clear, though his affair came to light after FBI agents conducting a criminal investigation into possible security breaches examined his computer emails. The scandal started with harassing emails sent by Broadwell to another (unidentified) woman, eventually leading the FBI to discover the affair, U.S. officials told The Associated Press on Saturday. The FBI investigation supposedly began several months ago with a complaint against Broadwell, a 40-year-old graduate of the U.S. Military Academy and an Army Reserve officer. That probe led agents to her email account, which uncovered the relationship with the 60-yearold retired four-star general.

The Petraeuses The decision to step down from the CIA was Petraeus’ alone. Few imagined that such a dazzling career would have so tawdry and so sudden a collapse. Petraeus, a gaunt fitness fanatic, is known as a brainy ascetic. He and his wife, Holly,

whose father was the superintendent at West Point when Petraeus graduated in 1974, and their two grown children had long been viewed by military families as an inspiration, a model for making a marriage work despite the separation and hardship of long deployments overseas. After he took the CIA job in September 2011, the couple settled into a house in the Virginia suburbs and began the closest thing to a normal life together that they had had in years. After years in war zones, Petraeus told friends, he was amazed to eat dinner most nights with his wife and to discover weekends again. He told friends that on the day his daughter was married last month, he went for a 34-mile bike ride. “It’s a personal tragedy, of course, but it’s also a tragedy for the country,” said Bruce Riedel, a CIA veteran and a presidential adviser.

Code of conduct Petraeus had seemed all but indestructible. He had been shot in a training accident, had broken his pelvis in a sky diving mishap and survived prostate cancer. But inside the military, where Petraeus compiled such a stunning record, views of him were more complex. His circle of advisers included iconoclasts from the Army’s ranks as well as freethinking civilian analysts. “P4,” as he was called for the four stars he earned, was viewed with respect, but often grudging. His celebrity brought positive attention to an all-volunteer force that at times struggled to meet recruitment numbers. But that same publicity, and the fiercely ambitious man who pursued it,

The Associated Press file photo

David Petraeus, with his wife in 2009, led the military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan. He has been married for 38 years to Holly Petraeus, the daughter of the West Point superintendent when he was a student at the New York school.

drew private criticism from some officers, who nicknamed him King David. Like many others in jaundiced Washington, Riedel wondered whether the affair really required Petraeus, who turned 60 on Wednesday, to step down and leave the agency leaderless. But under the military law that governed his 37-year Army career, adultery is a crime when it may “bring discredit upon the armed forces.” And a secret affair can make an intelligence officer vulnerable to blackmail. The CIA director, Riedel said, probably felt he had no choice. “I think (he) grew up with a code that’s very demanding about duty and honor. He violated the code.” Concerned that the emails he exchanged with Broadwell raised the possibility of a security breach, the FBI brought the matter up with Petraeus directly, according to one official. The FBI approached the CIA di-

rector because his emails in the matter were in most instances sent from a personal account, not his CIA one. Petraeus decided to quit, abruptly ending a high-profile career that might have culminated with a run for the presidency, a notion he was believed to have been considering. “Such behavior is unacceptable, both as a husband and as the leader of an organization such as ours,” Petraeus wrote his staff. Petraeus handed his resignation letter to President Barack Obama on Thursday. By Friday evening, multiple officials identified Broadwell, who spent the better part of a year reporting on Petraeus’ time in Afghanistan. Her best-selling biography, “All In: The Education of General David Petraeus,” was published in January. Since Petraeus’ resignation, the book jumped in Amazon’s rankings, from 76,792 on Friday to 111 by mid-Saturday.

In the digital era, dalliances are hard to cover up By Michael Wines New York Times News Service

Alexander Hamilton, Warren Harding, FDR, LBJ, Ike. Reps. Mark Souder, Chris Lee and Anthony Weiner. Sens. Gary Hart, John Ensign and David Vitter. Maybe a first lady, Grace Coolidge. And now, David Petraeus. There would seem to be nothing new about the weakness of otherwise powerful Washington figures in the face of temptation. But that is not precisely true: The difference these days is that it is virtually impossible to get away with it. Petraeus’ affair is but the most recent in an embarrassment of political scandals that lately have spilled into public view: Vitter, of Louisiana, was exposed in 2009 as the client of high-priced prostitutes; Weiner, of New York, confessed in 2011 to sending sexually explicit photographs to women; Ensign, of Nevada, resigned last year after admitting to an illicit affair with a staff member. Souder, of Indiana, quit in 2010 over a relationship with a staff member with whom he had taped a video promoting sexual abstinence. Lee, of New York, left office the same year after sending via Twitter a photograph of himself, shirtless, to a woman he met on Craigslist. Says Wesley Hagood, the author of a compendium of presidential dalliances: “If they’d just pay attention and turn on the news, they’d know there’s going to be a consequence.” Petraeus was tripped up by an FBI investigation that stum-

bled across his extramarital relationship. But in a digital era when the details of even average citizens are cached for public view, the odds of exposure have become exponentially greater. Weiner and Lee employed Twitter to approach women. Vitter was again abashed this year after someone — not him, his spokesman insisted — sent and then deleted a message to @LuvMy_Kisses, the account of a young Louisiana woman. That tweet was uncovered by the Sunlight Foundation, which maintains an archive of deleted messages by American politicians. In matters of sex, desire frequently trumps common sense. It may be no accident that recklessness is epidemic among the powerful, though: A 2001 study in the Journal of Family Psychology concluded that the incidence of extramarital affairs rises in lock step with income and education. It used to be that sex scandals did not become scandals until their participants died. The affairs of Nelson Rockefeller, the former New York governor, became public only after he passed away while in bed with a girlfriend. The Washington press corps is famous, or infamous, for politely declining to report on the serial extramarital couplings of President John F. Kennedy, who had plenty of White House company: Hagood said his research indicates that about one-third of American presidents had extramarital affairs.

After it eventually became public, Hamilton published what was then regarded as a shockingly detailed account of his mistake, and expressed bitter recriminations. It was, he said, “morally impossible I should have been foolish as well as depraved enough to employ so vile an instrument” for what he said were “such insignificant ends.” Petraeus walked in Hamilton’s footsteps Friday, saying he “showed extremely poor judgment” and adding, “such behavior is unacceptable, both as a husband and as the leader of an organization such as ours.” By resigning, he took what seems to be the preferred course of action after such revelations; most politicians either quit or are ousted by voters. Vitter, who continues in Congress, is the rare exception. Whether resignation is always necessary is another matter. Hamilton is lionized as one of the republic’s greatest statesmen. Despite the revelation of his many affairs, Kennedy recently was rated the best of the nine most modern presidents in a poll of Americans, Dallek said. “You can’t get away with it now,” he said. “But the public seems to discount these things.”

Harding made love to his mistress in a White House closet. As a powerful senator from Texas, Lyndon Johnson — who called his collection of paramours a harem — commandeered a room in the Capitol for his meetings with women, said presidential historian Robert Dallek. Once in the White House, he said, Johnson installed a buzzer to alert him when his wife, Lady Bird, was approaching. Grace Coolidge was widely rumored to have running liaisons with Secret Service agents, to her husband’s great displeasure. President Bill Clinton, of course, goes without saying. Hagood said that among philandering politicians, absolute power may corrupt absolutely. “They think they’re above the rules — that somehow the rules don’t apply to them, or that they have special needs that deserve to be met.” So thought Alexander Hamilton, who as secretary of the treasury began an affair with Maria Reynolds, a woman who knocked on his door and said she was fleeing an abusive husband. Hamilton was the victim of a blackmail plot; Reynolds’ husband extracted $1,000 from him by threatening to expose the affair.

Email Continued from A1 The information could have proved of enormous value to foreign hackers, who already maintain a near-constant effort to access sensitive U.S. data. If Petraeus allowed his Gmail security to be compromised even slightly, by widening access, sharing passwords or logging in from multiple addresses, it would have brought foreign spy agencies that much closer to a treasure trove of information. The FBI investigation that led to Petraeus’ sudden resignation as CIA director on Friday began with a complaint several months ago about “harassing” emails sent by Broadwell, Petraeus’ biographer, to another woman who knows both of them, two government officials briefed on the case said Saturday. When FBI agents following up on the complaint began to examine Broadwell’s emails, they discovered exchanges between her and Petraeus that revealed that they were having an affair, according to several officials who described the investigation on the condition of anonymity. They also discovered that Broadwell apparently had acquired some classified documents, and considered whether Petraeus might be the source, one official said. A personal email account like Petraeus’ almost certainly would not have contained any high-level intelligence. But access to the account could have provided telling information on, for example, Petraeus’ travel schedule, his foreign contacts, even personal information about himself or other senior U.S. officials. Web-based email like Gmail and Yahoo Mail can be quite vulnerable to hacking. Technology writers have sometimes discussed what one writer called the “password fallacy,” the false sense of safety created by access systems such as Google’s that balance security against ease of use. Even with Google’s extra security features, the company must also avoid making security so onerous as to drive away customers, making it an easier target for foreign hackers even before Petraeus possibly started sharing access. And, as a Wired magazine investigation demonstrated in August, personal email accounts often allow hackers access to other personal accounts, worsening the damage. Chinese hacking efforts, perhaps the best-known but nowhere near the only threat to U.S. networks and computers, suggest the enormous scope and ferocious drive of foreign government hackers. Some Americans who have access to sensitive information and who travel to China describe going to tremendous lengths to minimize government efforts to seize their data. Some copy and paste their passwords from USB thumb drives rather than type them out, for fear of key-logging software. They carry “loaner” laptops and cellphones and pull out cellphone batteries during sensitive meetings, worried that the microphone could be switched on remotely. FBI investigators were not pursuing evidence of Petraeus’ marital infidelity, which would not be a criminal matter. “Alarms went off on larger security issues,” one official said.

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For computer models to make predictions, three things are needed: computer power, mathematical formulas designed to mirror real world cause and effect and current conditions converted into numbers that can be used in formulas. Experts input the data of current conditions into the formulas that say if X and Y happen, then it will produce Z. Then the computers run those what-if simulations over and over, with slight variations changing the end results. These scenarios are run tens of thousands of times, giving a whole range of outcomes. The key is seeing what happens most often and why. It’s not a dead-on prediction, but it breaks the future down into probabilities. “It’s essentially solving equations that are too extensive to solve with pencil and paper,” Weaver explained. It all comes down to collecting data, crunching it and

spitting out probabilities. It’s evidence turned into numbers. It’s math. Experts believe it’s the future. Silver said what he did with the election was nothing compared with what meteorologists did with Sandy, which was a matter of “real life-anddeath consequences.” The National Weather Service forecast an extremely rare due-west turn by the storm into southern New Jersey, he said. “It’s astounding. That’s a huge win for computer modeling.” Silver’s bold predictions that Obama would win upset some political pundits who predicted a Romney victory based on what they perceived as momentum, the enthusiasm of crowds, gut instinct and partisanship. But Silver was right, besting his 2008 record of getting 49 of 50 states right for president. “This is a victory for the stuff (computer modeling) in politics,” he said Thursday in a telephone interview. “It doesn’t mean we’re going to solve world peace with a computer. It doesn’t mean we’re going to be able predict earthquakes. … But we can chip away at the margins.” One of the next fields Silver said he’d like to get into is education because he believes that all the data being generated “is not being used in the best way.” “I hope that people focus not on me personally, but what I’m trying to do,” Silver said. What he and his colleagues are trying to do is take a chaotic world and make sense of it, turn events into equations to be solved. More than anything, statistics are tools for understanding, like a wrench for an auto mechanic, said Bill James, the godfather of modern baseball statistics and a colleague of Silver’s. James said contemplating what will happen in the future is something that “we all do every day, without really thinking about it. It is a necessary and relevant process. Thus, it is something that is worthy of our best analytical efforts.”

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Behind the screens

— Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkin@bendbulletin.com

VETERAN’S DAY

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stats geek. The Oakland A’s, a team that famously uses computer statistics in selecting players, surprised everyone by getting into the playoffs despite one of the lowest payrolls in baseball. Computer modeling tells the government what happens when a nuclear bomb explodes, helped Goodyear make a better tire and helped the makers of Pringles figure out how to keep the potato crisps from breaking in the can, said Bill Tang, program director for the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory simulation program. Every time you swipe a credit card, a computer is using predictive models based on past evidence to determine if it’s really you or if it is fraud, Mitchell added. For about 40 years, climate scientists have used computer models to predict what global warming will look like with dead-on accuracy, said climate computer modeler Andrew Weaver of the University of Victoria in British Columbia.

tack on Japan. They anticipated an invasion on Nov. 1, 1945, and a casualty rate of 70 percent. But the Japanese surrendered following the U.S. dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Myring still went to Japan, but with forces removing the country of its munitions following the Japanese surrender. He worked at Nagasaki, site of the second atomic bombing. Now retired from a career in law enforcement, he visits schools and tells of his experiences. Myring said he enlisted in the Marines rather than another branch in order to wear the dress blue uniform of the Corps. “I liked the fancy uniform,” he said with a smile. “I never got one.”

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Continued from A1 Statistician and blogger Nate Silver correctly forecast on his beat-up laptop how all 50 states would vote for president. He even predicted a tie in Florida and projected it eventually would tip to President Barack Obama, which is the equivalent of predicting a coin landing on its side. (Four days after the election, Obama can claim victory in Florida, 50 to 49.1 percent.) Silver did it by taking polling data, weighing it for past accuracy and running 40,000 computer simulations at a time. He then gave his forecast in terms of percentages, saying Obama had a 91 percent chance of being re-elected. In the case of Sandy, lives were at stake. With the election, reputations were on the line and some pundits were dismissive of the computer modeling. Bets were made, challenges issued. The math majors came out on top thanks to better and more accessible data and rapidly increasing computer power. “In this particular case, rationality scored a win,” said Princeton University neuroscientist Sam Wang, who since 2004 has been using mathematical formulas and polling data to predict elections for the Princeton Election Consortium. Wang predicted a “100 percent chance” of an Obama victory but missed Florida, giving it to Republican Mitt Romney. For the record, Wang notes that he beat Silver at accurate Senate race predictions. Computers soon should be able to tell health officials where the next food poisoning outbreak will spread, a U.S. government lab predicts. Tom Mitchell, head of the Machine Learning Department at Carnegie Mellon University, called computer model predictions based on historical evidence “one of more positive trends we’re going to see this century. … We’re just beginning.” Take a look at baseball, where Silver got his start as a

cunning, ruthless enemy. During training, the troops were trained to be wary of surrendering Japanese with their hands up, Myring said. In a moment, a surrendering soldier might drop to his knees, with a comrade firing a machine gun strapped to his back, according to the training manual provided to Myring during preparations for the battle. When darkness fell on the battlefield, taunts rippled from loudspeakers, with Japanese soldiers warning Marines crouched in foxholes that they would die that night. Myring recalled a dead Marine found hanging from his thumbs in a cave, bayoneted many times. “That was a terrible sight to see,” Myring said. After Iwo Jima, Myring was sent to Hawaii, where U.S. units prepared for a ground at-

GMC

CHEVROLET

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Numbers

Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

R G U N Y R E R A G

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Continued from A1 “It was just a massacre the first day,” Myring said. “There were body parts flying in all directions.” Myring had the job of running a communications wire to a battalion switchboard. By the time he reported to the battalion command with the wire, the wires had been destroyed by mortar fire. Five days into the battle, Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal captured an image of one of two American flags being raised on Mount Suribachi, the highest point on the island. Rosenthal’s iconic photograph transformed the moment into an historic point in the battle. “All the ships saw it in the bay,” Myring said. “They were all clanking their bells and shooting off, and everybody stopped and cheered. Everybody thought the war was over, the battle was over, but that was just the beginning.” Myring was trained in communications and worked alongside a Navajo code talker, Willie Notah. The Navajo language served as the basis for a code that the Japanese were unable to crack. On March 9, 1945, Myring was digging a foxhole with Notah when a mortar round landed in front of his friend. Notah was blown 15 feet high and lost his leg, dying on his way to the field hospital. Myring, standing behind him, got blown back and knocked out with a small head wound. After three days in a field hospital, he returned to duty. That was the norm on Iwo Jima. A Marine might be wounded several times and still return to the fight. It was a battle against a

“All the ships saw it in the bay,” Lorin Myring says of the raising of the American flag on Iwo Jima, captured in this iconic picture that Myring has hanging in his room at Stone Lodge Retirement Home. At that time, “everybody thought the war was over, the battle was over, but that was just the beginning.”

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Marine

same-sex marriage by popular vote, Spain upheld its gay marriage law, and France pushed ahead with legislation that could see gay marriage legalized early next year. “The church is called to present itself as the lone critic of modernity, the only check,” the newspaper article said.

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self as the lone voice of courage in opposing initiatives to give same-sex couples legal recognition. In a separate Vatican Radio editorial, the pope’s spokesman asked why proponents don’t push for recognition for polygamous couples as well. The media blitz came after three U.S. states approved

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The Associated Press After gay marriage initiatives scored big wins last week in the U.S. and Europe, the Vatican is vowing to never stop insisting that marriage can only be between a man and a woman. In a front-page article in Saturday’s Vatican newspaper, the Holy See sought to frame it-

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Vatican digs in on gay marriage

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

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LOCALNEWS

Oregon news, B3 West news, B5

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

STATE NEWS • Salem • Corvallis • Eugene

• Salem: Mileage tax under consideration for vehicles using little or no gas. • Corvallis: Students in conservation class get practical experience restoring wetlands. • Eugene: Survey shows nonprofit arts scene gives boost to economy. Stories on B3

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Protest supports pot clinic owner Ab u sed

WARM SPRINGS

Bulletin staff report A clutch of protesters stood Saturday in the cold to register their discontent with the way Prineville police handled two arrests, including one involving the owner of the marijuana clinic in town. Police said about 50 people showed up; the clinic owner, who helped organize the demonstration, said closer to 100. The demonstration on Third Street outside the police department lasted more than an hour. Ryan Cole, 35, co-owner of 5c, the Crook County Compassionate Clinic/Club, said he hung a sign in his

Main Street shop and called hundreds of people, urging them to turn out Saturday. The Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team had arrested Cole Tuesday on charges he supplied marijuana to a minor and recklessly endangered another person. Jeff York, a Prineville sign shop owner, said he, too, encouraged people to protest. He said he had no connection to either case that sparked the rally. Cole said the arrest, unrelated to his two-month-old business, was a setup, and that the minor involved appeared at the rally to disavow

any involvement with the charges against Cole. I didn’t ask him to do anything, or tell him to do anything, he did it on his own,” Cole said. Cole said he was surprised by the number who appeared to walk and carry signs in the mid-day cold. “They lined up all the way on both sides of the road from Tastee Treet to city hall,” about two blocks, he said. He said Prineville police officers spent a short amount of time at the protest. Police Sgt. Jimmy O’Daniel said officers stopped by to remind protesters to stay off

the street and cross in crosswalks. He said the protest came off without incident. “It was pretty much a non-event,” O’Daniel said Saturday. He said the marchers carried signs alleging police brutality and protesting Cole’s arrest. The brutality allegations refer to a federal lawsuit brought recently by Curtis Hooper, 34, a former Jefferson County Jail inmate with a history of minor offenses, according to his suit. Hooper alleges mistreatment by sheriff’s deputies during 2010 and 2011. See Protest / B2

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Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Karma Smith, with Double Tap Firearms, from left, shows a gun to Mary Meloy and Angie Abplanalp, both of Bend, during the Oregon Trail Gun Show on Saturday in the High Desert Activity Center at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond on Saturday. The event continues today.

At the gun show, a man’s world no longer By Ben Botkin The Bulletin

REDMOND — Firearms, the accessory of cinematic cowboys and secret agents, are exclusively macho symbols no more. Increasing numbers of women are becoming gun owners, according to firearms dealers at the Oregon Trail Gun Show in Redmond and a national Gallup poll. The gun show started Saturday at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center with 50 vendors selling firearms ranging from Colt pistols of the 1870s to Smith & Wesson handguns of this decade. One change over the 18 years the gun show has been coming to the fairgrounds is the growing number of women interested in firearms, said

Ken Daugherty, owner of the gun show. “There’s more and more women coming in,” he said. Women are mostly interested in firearms as a means of personal protection, Daugherty said. A 2011 Gallup poll found 43 percent of women reported owning a gun. Between 2003 and 2010, the rate of female gun ownership ranged from 32 to 39 percent, according to the poll. Will Smith, owner of Double Tap Firearms in Bend, said female interest in firearms, including concealed carry safety and training classes, isn’t a rarity. About 40 percent of the people enrolling in the courses are women across a wide range of ages, he said.

If you go The Oregon Trail Gun Show continues from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. today at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond. Admission is $8, children 12 and younger are free.

“Most of the time, they just want something to carry so they can protect themselves,” said Karma Smith, Will’s wife. The couple also points to qualities in their female clients that are well suited for handling firearms: attentiveness during training and good hand-eye coordination. Gary Griffin of Bend,

another vendor, has an inventory aimed at potential female clients. Pink and purple concealed-carry gun covers were on his table alongside the more masculine black covers. For women new to guns, the show offered an opportunity to browse the merchandise. At the show, Daniel Leifer said he convinced his sisterin-law Isabel Menz, both of Bend, to fire a rifle, an AR-15 semi-automatic, for the first time, at glow sticks. Menz said she enjoyed the experience but wasn’t ready to buy a firearm just yet. Leifer was a little more enthusiastic. “It was a blast,” he said. — Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkin@bendbulletin.com

kids from tribes get new resource By Ben Botkin The Bulletin

Victims of child abuse at Warm Springs Indian Reservation once traveled the 60-plus miles to Bend for intervention services like medical exams and interviews. That’s no longer necessary with the opening in Warm Springs of the Child Abuse Intervention Center. The center opened Nov. 5 as a venture of the Indian Health Service and the Confederated Tribes. Located in existing health service offices where caseworkers can interview children, the center will provide medical exams to children in suspected cases of physical and sexual abuse. The center notifies law enforcement of suspected cases of child abuse. The center is the second facility of its type on tribal lands, according to the tribes. It became a reality after two years of planning by a team of tribal and federal prosecutors, police officers, FBI agents, caseworkers and medical professionals. The center will provide easy access to children without the need for them and their parents or guardians to travel to Bend, said Nancy Seyler, a Warm Springs tribal member and chair of the team that planned the center. Depending on where the family lives within the reservation, it’s easily an hour drive each way, she said. “Having our own child advocacy center will definitely cut down the travel time,” Seyler said. Seyler said child abuse is a serious problem at the reservation, adding that this holds true for areas off the reservation as well. The center is called “Snwiyaila Miyanashna” in Warm Springs’ native tongue, which means “Talking for the Children.” It’s also intended to provide a comfortable, familiar environment for children in IHS facilities where families and children already go for other unrelated medical needs, Seyler said. IHS physician Dr. Rachel Locker is the executive director of the intervention center. “With our center here, children and families are probably going to come forward more because they’re familiar with Dr. Locker,” Seyler said. “They’ve been to IHS. They know it’s a safe place and she’s a safe person.” See Tribes / B2

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• Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@ bendbulletin.com and we’ll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

Bend High shuts out Klamath in 1937 Armistice Day game Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 10, 1912

Bachelor exodus in search of brides elsewhere Last week another Bend bachelor hied himself eastward and, report has it, will return ere long no longer a bachelor. Also, it is rumored,

two more localites hitherto enrolled in the ranks of the singly blessed are soon to take unto themselves better halves. And during the last few months a handful of other Bend men have done likewise, so universal is becoming the epidemic. The point is not that Dan Cupid is flourishing so well in this unequalled climate as that so many of the Benders are going elsewhere for their brides, totally and ignobly ignoring that prime trade adage, without which no community

YESTERDAY can be built up — ”patronize home industries.” And, therefore, it is that a report has leaked out from the inner secret circles of Bend’s exclusive bachelor girls’ club to the effect that recently that organization officially passed resolutions sternly and scorchingly condemning the mere men for their conduct in this grave matter. However that may be, with the “Made in Oregon” movement “at its height there seems reason to

believe that shortly there will be added a new slogan, combining this and the one mentioned above namely, “Patronize Home Maids in Oregon.”

Young forger makes break A young fellow, Ernest Kidd, turned forger here last week, passing several checks upon merchants to which he signed the name of Alex Hanley. A.M. Lara swore out a complaint against the boy, and he was arrested by Deputy Sheriff L.L. Fox. The boy confessed

that his name was Kidd, saying that he had been employed on the Bill Hanley ranches in Harney County. There, it seems, he had been kicked in the head by a horse, and been in a hospital a long time. He was turned loose with no money, coming to Bend “broke,” tried the check game. He maintained that he had lost the fifty or so dollars he had secured in shaking dice. Saturday Kidd disappeared, giving Fox a clean go-bye, and since has not been seen. See Yesterday / B2


B2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

Yesterday Continued from B1 Later Fox said he finds that Kidd has a bad record. While working on the streets of Burns he escaped from the marshall there. Those who saw him believe he is need of medical attention more than anything else, as the horse kick seems to have upset his mind. Kidd is slightly built, rather small, clean shaven, with a low forehead, and has a bad scar on the left side of his head.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 10, 1937

Keep back of the lines The advance sale of tickets indicates that there will be an overflow crowd on the Lava Bear field here tomorrow afternoon when Bend and Klamath Falls in an intersectional football contest that is attracting the interest of high school fans in all parts of the state. The conduct of the overflow crowd may have a bearing on the outcome of the important contest. Under football rules, officials have the right to impose a penalty when excited fans crowd over the sidelines and refuse to move back. Such a penalty is imposed on the home team. Many Bend people will recall that several years ago a Bend team suffered a costly penalty because people refused to move back of the sidelines. Bend’s undefeated team will have work enough tomorrow afternoon in stopping the yardage drives of a powerful Klamath Falls eleven. Faithful followers of the Bears can do their part by keeping away from the sidelines.

Lava Bears swamp Klamath Falls in Armistice Day game Bend’s undefeated and untied Lava Bears definitely staked their claim to an Oregon state championship here yesterday afternoon by defeating the powerful Klamath Falls team 25 to 0 before the largest crowd to ever attend a high school contest in this city. The Bears achieved their brilliant victory without using their noted razzle dazzle plays to any great extent, partly because these trick plays were not needed and partly because a

bitterly cold wind swept across the field, chilling fingers that must be nimble to handle a fast moving ball. Not only did the Bears swamp the Pelicans with ease, but Giovanini and his fellow warriors from the land of the Klamaths were unable to threaten the Bend goal on even one occasion. Playing some of the greatest defensive ball ever seen on an Oregon gridiron, the Bears never permitted the visitors to get nearer the Bend goal than the 40 yard stripe.

Indians reaping salmon harvest at Celilo Falls At the “Happy Fishing Grounds,” Celilo Falls, Indians of the Pacific Northwest are daily reaping a harvest of salmon that have breasted the mighty Columbia River on migrations upstream to spawning grounds. No white man may fish at Celilo — the Indians having exclusive treaty rights with Uncle Sam. Approximately 100 tons of fish are taken daily.

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 10, 1962

U.S. Navy intercepts Russian ships from Cuba The U.S. Navy has intercepted five Russian ships, three of which were carrying ballistic missiles back to the Soviet Union from Cuba. Assistant Defense Secretary Arthur Sylvester said the U.S. government was “satisfied from what we have seen” that the metal encased objects on the decks of the ships were missiles.

Editorial: Nixon mistaken in blaming newsmen Richard M. Nixon played his swan song in politics Tuesday, and wound up with a blast at newspaper reporters who had covered his campaign. This is not the first time Nixon has blamed reporters for his political misfortunes. He was quite critical of newsmen after his loss to President Kennedy in 1960. It’s no secret that Nixon does not get along well with newsmen. And the fault lies largely with Nixon. Those who covered his 1960 campaign said they found him cold, aloof, and uncooperative. Those Cali-

fornia reporters who followed him this year had the same complaints. There are lots of other places Nixon could find to place the blame. First, there’s Governor Brown, a pretty ordinary opponent on the whole, but quite a lot of Californians liked him. Second, there’s Nixon himself. In spite of his denials, there was a considerable body of opinion that he was looking for a job as a stepping stone to 1964. Third, there were the opposing organizations. Brown had a better organization. Nixon is a loner, makes too many decisions himself without consulting others whose views might be less colored. As a result, organization work in the Nixon camp is not as good as it could be. These are some things Mr. Nixon might have considered, too, instead of saving all his fire for a bunch of newspaper reporters.

Truman sees Nixon return Former President Harry S. Truman, terming Tuesday’s elections “a decisive Democratic victory” predicted today that Richard M. Nixon, who lost the California Governors race, will return to politics despite Nixon’s denial.

25 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 10, 1987

Mom trying to bring son home When Bennie Dexter left Bend for Vietnam, he told his mother, “If anything happens to me, Mom, please see that I get back home. No one knows for sure what happened to Dexter, but he isn’t home yet. Dexter, an Air Force sergeant, was captured by the North Vietnamese on May 10, 1966 — Mother’s Day. And his mother Ileana Dexter, has spent the last 21 years trying unsuccessfully to fulfill her son’s wish. Bennie Dexter is among 2,411 men and two women who remain classified as “missing in action” from the Vietnam War. Dexter’s case is particularly interesting because it is one of 70 cases that the U.S. government

finds most compelling — cases in which there is some evidence that the Indochinese know more than they have been telling about these men. LIFE magazine, which hit the newsstand this week, presents 25 of these cases — including what little is known about the capture and the imprisonment of Bennie Dexter of Bend. “The Lord is not going to let my POW be forgotten,” said Ileana Dexter. “I know that he died — I feel that in my heart — but I won’t give up on his last will, which is to bring him home. The U.S. military has told Mrs. Dexter this much about her son’s disappearance in Vietnam: “On 10 May, 1966, Bennie L. Dexter, U.S. Air Force, was captured while driving a Jeep, near the Darlac-Quang Duc Province border. His Jeep was found at this location the next day, and there was a witness to his capture. Other Vietnamese saw Airman Dexter in captivity in Quang Duc Province, South Vietnam. The Hanoi government in 1966 put out a list of names of 29 Air Force men being held prisoner. The list included Bennie Dexter. In 1973, 20 of those 29 men came home to the U.S. on the first planeload of freed POWs. Six of the others were known to have died in captivity, and two more have been accounted for, bringing the total to 28. But no one seems to know what happened to Bennie Dexter. He was presumed dead in 1976, and a funeral was held for him in Bend. But his mother is still determined to fill her son’s wish that his remains be brought home to Central Oregon. “All I’s asking for is them (the Vietnamese) to acknowledge my son’s name, and send home my son’s remains and his dog tags” said Mrs. Dexter. “That’s all I want.” The “Operation Sweet Tooth” program, which Mrs. Dexter and others set up to deliver Christmas boxes to G.I.s in Vietnam, will be honored in the official book describing the dedication of the Oregon Vietnam Memorial. “You can never really let go of it,” she said. “These men were our sons — they were so close to our hearts.”

Protest Continued from B1 Cole claims police want his clinic closed and targeted him for arrest. The clinic keeps meticulous records, as required by law, he said. “I’m in (business) to help people, people with cancer, AIDS, multiple sclerosis,” he said. Prineville Mayor Betty Roppe said she could not comment on the allegations in Hooper’s lawsuit. Hooper also names Prineville as a defendant in his civil suit. Cole’s medical marijuana

Tribes Continued from B1 In a statement, Locker said: “The Warm Springs tribal elders have shown incredible leadership in protecting the children in their Tribal Nation.” The center has a room for medical exams and a separate room for interviews. For the interviews, a third room with recording equipment, including a camera, is available. The center took steps to make the rooms visually appealing by including photographs of the region, child-size furniture and crayons and coloring books. The furniture and equipment were purchased through grants from the IHS and FBI. The FBI also donated some of the recording gear. Since the early 1990s, children from the reservation have traveled to KIDS Center in Bend for the services now available on the reservation. (KIDS stands for Kids Intervention and Diagnostic Service.) The Bend center serves children from Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson counties and the

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clinic has attracted little, if any, controversy, Roppe said Saturday. She knew it had opened but overlooked its presence until her husband pointed it out to her recently, she said. She’s never heard a police officer or city councilor express an opinion about Cole or the clinic, the mayor said. “I haven’t heard anybody raising any kind of fuss,” she said. But “the police accused him of providing marijuana to an underage student. I’m assuming they had to have some kind of documentation on that.”

“It’s wonderful because the kids don’t have to travel so far and they’re going to somebody they have already met in the community.” — Shelly Smith, executive director of the KIDS Center

Warm Springs reservation, said Shelly Smith, executive director of the KIDS Center. Twelve to 15 children from Warm Springs visited the Bend facility each year, Smith said. “It’s wonderful because the kids don’t have to travel so far and they’re going to somebody they have already met in the community,” Smith said. Smith has assisted the new center with training and resources such as information about forms and paperwork needed for the work. — Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkin@bendbulletin.com

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CONGRESS U.S. Senate

Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. House of Representatives

Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River

2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov/ Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

STATE OF OREGON Gov. John Kitzhaber, Democrat 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Secretary of State Kate Brown, Democrat 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us

Superintendent of Public Instruction Susan Castillo 255 Capitol Street N.E. Salem, Oregon 97310 Phone: 503-947-5600 Fax: 503-378-5156 Email: superintendent.castillo @state.or.us Web: www.ode.state.or.us Treasurer Ted Wheeler, Democrat 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer @state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, Democrat 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite 1045

Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

By Damian Mann Mail Tribune (Medford)

More fuel-efficient cars are siphoning off gas-tax revenues that support highway maintenance in Oregon. As a result, state transportation officials are considering a mileage tax on vehicles that average 55 miles or better on a gallon of gasoline. A pilot project started this month will test different methods of tracking mileage, which could lead to a bill before the Legislature in 2013 to tax vehicles that need little or no gasoline. “I don’t think people will be excited about GPS tracking,” said Derek DeBoer, one of the owners of TC Chevy in Ashland. DeBoer, who owns a Chevrolet Volt that runs primarily on electricity and is recharged by plugging it into an electrical outlet, said he still thinks the state will have to find some way of collecting revenues to keep roads properly maintained as cars become more fuel-efficient. “It’s a natural consequence of going green,” he said. James Whitty, manager of

“Every vehicle should have a minimal responsibility for road use.” — James Whitty, Oregon Department of Transportation

ODOT’s Office of Innovative Partnerships, said the state’s proposal suggests various options to keep track of mileage — starting with odometer readings by an ODOT official for those who don’t trust technology. More tech-tolerant motorists might opt for a mileage reporting device that plugs into a data port in the car. Another option is to use a smartphone in conjunction with the mileage reporting device so that miles traveled out of state wouldn’t be subject to Oregon taxes. An even more sophisticated option is to install a reporting device with GPS so that miles traveled outside the state aren’t calculated. This option would transmit the data directly to the state.

Bills for the mileage tax would be sent out monthly to yearly, depending on how many miles are racked up. Whitty said so many options are being considered in the program because a government-produced GPS tracking system tested in 2006 met with criticism from the public over the potential for government monitoring. This time, the GPS tracking devices would be produced by the private sector, Whitty said, similar to many applications on smartphones. Since 2006, the public has become used to location tracking systems inside smartphones. Also, many new cars have navigation systems and other devices that already keep track of mileage. Whitty said many people with all-electric vehicles think the fact they own a green car means they shouldn’t be penalized by paying any road tax. “Every vehicle should have a minimal responsibility for road use,” Whitty said. The Legislature will determine how much to tax for every mile these vehicles travel when it considers the mileage tax bill.

Under the pilot project, which is being tested on 47 vehicles, the tax-per-mile is 1.5 cents, based on the average 20 miles-per-gallon for a vehicle in Oregon. The state collects about 30 cents for each gallon of gasoline. Whitty said some transportation officials think the taxper-mile should be lower as an incentive to purchase electric vehicles. Under the current proposal, the new tax would apply only to vehicles purchased after July 1, 2015. “It’s easier to start the system with new vehicles,” Whitty said. Vehicle mileage ratings will continue to improve until 2025, when the federal government will require that the average new car run 54.5 miles on a gallon of gas. Rep. Peter Buckley, an Ashland Democrat, said he tried to sign up for the pilot project but missed the deadline. He said the state needs to find a way to collect revenue lost from fuel-efficient vehicles, but “at the same time, we want electric vehicles to become more popular,” he said.

OSU students in sustainability class helping restore 18-acre wetland site By Bennett Hall Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS — With a pair of long-handled loppers in hand, Jona Engel waded into a willow thicket just south of the Benton County Fairgrounds a recent late morning and started snipping 2-foot cuttings off branches. “You want ones that are going to survive,” Engel said. “Good green leaves, nice and straight.” Engel, a 23-year-old senior in mechanical engineering at Oregon State University, was one of six students in Steve Cook’s Geosciences 300 class, Sustainability for the Common Good, who spent several hours last week grubbing out weeds and planting willow cuttings on the site of a former lumber mill. The students get course credit, and Benton County gets free labor for an 18-acre wetland restoration project on the site. “This is the third time we’ve done this in cooperation with this course instructor,” said Adam Stebbins, a project coordinator for the county. The county also has used work crews from the jail and the juvenile corrections program to help keep costs down on the project, which began in 2009.

Jesse Skoubo / Corvallis Gazette-Times

Oregon State student Jona Engel trims branches from willows to be planted beside streams for wetlands restoration south of the Benton County Fairgrounds in Corvallis. Engel spent several hours recently grubbing out weeds and planting willow cuttings on the site of a former lumber mill.

The early phases of the restoration focused on taking out levees and accumulated woody material from the old mill’s log pond, reconstructing the channel of Dunawi Creek through the property and uprooting invasive plants such as reed canary grass and Scotch broom. “We had to dig down close to eight feet to remove all the reed canary and all the chipped wood,” Stebbins said. After that, the focus shifted to regenerating native vegetation. In addition to seeding the area with a variety of grasses, work crews have planted close

to 10,000 shrubs and trees, from willow and cottonwood to swamp rose and Pacific ninebark. “We’re just filling in the gaps now,” Stebbins said. The project is intended to meet state and federal requirements to mitigate the environmental impacts of a street realignment and some redevelopment work undertaken by the property’s owner, Andrew Martin. Benton County Public Works Director Roger Irvin said the wetland reconstruction to date has cost about $250,000, with the county and

Martin splitting the bill. The cost of monitoring and maintaining the restoration work over the next five years or so, which will be considerably less, will be absorbed by the county, Irvin said. Under a conservation easement negotiated between Martin and the county, the project area is to be maintained as a natural wetland. In the meantime, the former mill site is already beginning to look more like a natural area than an industrial zone. “There’s a lot of wildlife already using this site,” Stebbins said. “We’ve had some ducklings, some deer moving through ... ultimately we’ll have beaver in here as well.” Plans also call for a trail to be constructed through the site after the Department of State Lands determines that the mitigation work is a success, which is expected to take about five years. There’s already a pedestrian tunnel running under Reservoir Avenue that would enable an easy link to the Midge Cramer Bike Path, which runs through the fairgrounds and connects the OSU campus with the Bald Hill Natural Area. “That was definitely something Andrew Martin wanted and definitely something the county wanted,” Stebbins said.

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Dog killed when shots fired at pickup CAVE JUNCTION — A Cave Junction woman has been charged with animal abuse and attempted assault after police say she fired at two people in a pickup truck, killing a dog in the truck’s bed. The incident on Friday began when two acquaintances of 44-year-old Robin L. Smith arrived to pick up a hand tool left outside Smith’s house. Police say one of the acquaintances was walking back to the truck when Smith walked outside and fired at him with a handgun. She missed, but fired again. One of the shots struck a dog in the pickup bed, killing it. Smith was booked into the Josephine County Jail. An attorney for Smith could not be identified Saturday afternoon.

Antlerless elk forbidden this year ROSEBURG — The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has forbidden the hunting of antlerless elk in the Coast Range to hunters with disability permits. The Roseburg News-Review reports that in previous years, hunters with disability permits could take an antlerless elk while rifle hunting in the Tiogo Unit. This year, hunters may only harvest a three-point or better bull elk. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife made the change because the elk population in that area is below the department’s management objective. The anterless elk option was also eliminated

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for archery hunters this past season. ODFW officials said as the elk population recovers, it will consider allowing antlerless harvests where appropriate.

Fire district gets new station on 3rd try GLIDE — Glide firefighters twice offered a price tag on a new fire station to voters, and twice, it failed. The third time, it seems, was the charm: Voters have approved a $2.5 million bond to build a fire station for the Glide Rural Fire Protection District. The Roseburg News-Review reports the 12,020-square-foot station will double the capacity of the current 35-year-old station. The bond will cost taxpayers up to 57 cents per $1,000 assessed valuation over 25 years, according to officials. Voters in 2010 rejected a proposal to build a slightly larger $2.95 million station. In 2008, voters turned down a proposal to build a $3.85 million station.

Wildlife officials: Dead deer poached ALBANY — Oregon State Police wildlife troopers in the Albany area say they’re trying to solve the case of a buck deer legally killed by a hunter, then stolen before the hunter could remove it from a field. Trooper Kirk Burkholder says the unidentified hunter had tagged the deer and hidden it under a tree on Frank Timber property near where he killed it. When the hunter returned the deer was gone. — From wire reports

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Arts give boost to Eugene’s economy By Saul Hubbard The Register-Guard (Eugene)

The not-for-profit arts and culture scene in Eugene has a significant impact on the city’s economy, one that is above average when compared with other communities of similar size, according to a recent study released by Americans for the Arts, a national advocacy group. Nonprofit arts groups and their audiences in Eugene spend an estimated $45.6 million a year, according to data collected in 2010 and 2011. That spending is directly responsible for 984 local fulltime-equivalent jobs: nonprofit employees, hospitality industry positions at restaurants and hotels, and others, the study found. When indirect spending is factored in — the assumption that recipients of arts-related dollars are themselves spending some of that money in the

local economy — the nonprofit arts and culture scene becomes tied to 1,739 fulltime jobs in Eugene, according to the study. Jobs directly linked to the arts aren’t particularly wellcompensated, with incomes averaging $21,000 a year in Eugene — though that’s in line with arts and culture job incomes ranging from $20,000 to $25,000 a year in communities of comparable size. When compared with 27 other communities with populations between 100,000 and 250,000 that took part in the national study, Eugene’s overall arts-related spending is above the $43 million average, and is tied to more full-time jobs than the average of 755 direct jobs and 1,278 indirect jobs in those communities. The study compares Eugene both with communities that spend very little on the

arts — such as Wayne County, N.C., or McKinney, Texas — and others that easily outpace it — such as Providence, R.I., or the greater Charlottesville area in Virginia. A total of 182 communities nationwide took part in this fourth installment of American for the Arts’ “Arts and Economic Prosperity” study. The advocacy organization provides the methodology and crunches the numbers, while local communities collect the data and cover a portion of the study’s costs. It was Eugene’s first participation in the study. The city put $5,000 toward the study, while the Arts and Business Alliance of Eugene and the University of Oregon’s Center for Community Arts and Cultural Policy each contributed $2,500. About 31 percent of eligible nonprofit groups in Eugene took part.

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

NORTHWEST NEWS

O D N Jacob Alan Alice Lee Cobb, of Bend Dec. 25, 1921 - Nov. 7, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: A private family memorial at a time to be decided. Contributions may be made to:

The National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, 1776 D Street NW, Washington, DC 20006 or National Society Magna Charta DamesÂŽ P.O. Box 4222, Philadelphia, PA 19144.

Craig A. Van Noy, of La Pine May 26, 1943 - Nov. 7, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private Memorial Service will be held. Contributions may be made to:

Lost or Exploited Children, 1-800-843-5678 www.missingkids.com

Dorothy "Dolly" Simpson, of Bend Nov. 10, 1928 - Nov. 7, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: A family Celebration of Life is planned at a time to be decided. Contributions may be made to:

Partner's In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 http://www.partnersbend.org

Kathryn Louise Wood, of Bend July 17, 1915 - Nov. 4, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: A private urn committal service will take place at a later date.

Patricia Louise Petersen, of Bend Dec. 20, 1929 - Nov. 5, 2012 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: A graveside service will be held at 1:00 pm on Friday, November 16, 2012 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend, Oregon.

Ronald Eldridge, of Prineville June 30, 1936 - Nov. 8, 2012 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: At Ronald's request, no public services will be held.

Sesock

Verda Dianne Blake Chrysler

April 18, 1953 - Nov. 4, 2012

Nov. 8, 1944 - August 24, 2012

By Chelsea Gorrow

Jacob A. Sesock, age 59, a resident of Potlatch, ID, passed away early Sunday morning at the Gritman Medical Center in Moscow, ID, from colon cancer. Jacob was born on April 18, 1953, in Bend, OR, to Jacob W. and Martha (DeRocher) Sesock. Jake attended St. Francis of Assisi Catholic School in Bend, OR, a time he remembered with much fondness. He then attended Bend Senior High School graduating in 1971. He completed his education by attending Central Oregon Community College and receiving an associate degree in Electronics. He married Lauretta Robbins on Sept. 8, 1973, in Bend, OR. The couple made their home at Bigfork, MT. Mr. Sesock was a system dispatcher for Pacific Power Co. (now Flathead Electric Co-op). Jacob also worked as a station wireman foreman and retired from the company after 32 years service in 2006. The couple moved to Potlatch, ID, in 2007, where they have made their home since. Mr. Sesock has been ill with colon cancer for 1 1/2 years. He was a member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church and belonged to the Knights of Columbus in Potlatch. Jake had many hobbies including hunting, fishing, and wood-working. But his greatest love was spending time with his family, especially his five grandchildren. Survivors include his wife, Lauretta Sesock at the Potlatch home; one daughter, Sarah Ristine and her husband, Tom from Potlatch, ID; his mother, Martha Breen of Bend, OR; one brother, Ken Sesock and wife, Alison of Bigfork, MT; one sister, Judy Pederson and husband, Steve of Bend, OR; stepbrother, Robert Breen and wife, Donna of Bend, OR; and one stepsister, Julie Breen of Bend, OR; five grandchildren, Adam(9), Isabella(7), Anna(5), Matthew(4) and Joseph Ristine(1). Viewing will be at 6:30 p.m., followed by the Rosary which will be recited Sunday evening, at 7:00 p.m., at St. Mary’s Catholic Church on Nov. 11, 2012. Mass of Christian Burial will be on Monday, Nov. 12, 2012, at 11:00 a.m., at St. Mary’s Catholic Church with Father Caleb Vogel officiating. Burial will follow at the Rock Creek Cemetery, Potlatch, ID. Memorial contributions may be given to St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Potlatch, ID, or to the Knights of Columbus, Potlatch, ID, 83855. Kramer Funeral Home, in Palouse, WA, is handling the arrangements.

Verda Dianne Blake Chrysler passed on August 24, 2012, in Bend, OR, of cancer. Verda was born November 8, 1944, in Los Angeles, CA, to James and Kathleen Thompson Blake. She Verda Chrysler moved to the Central Oregon area in 1945. Verda graduated Bend High School in 1962, where she was active in various music, theatrical and political activities. In the late 1960s she moved to Eugene, OR, where she met and married the father of her two children, Ibrahim Hamide. In 1985, Verda married Jon Chrysler and moved to Bellevue, WA, where she worked in sales training and in the early cell phone industry before moving to Republic, WA, to enjoy a more rural small town lifestyle. She was active in the life of the community and helped organize the Ansorge Artists Affair, a continuing annual celebration of the Arts in Curlew, WA. In 2009, she returned to Bend to be near her family and where she continued her metaphysical studies. She is survived by her mother, Kathleen Coyner of Bend; brother, Cliff (Marita) Blake of Lillian, AL; sisters, Kathy Blake and Julie Bibler of Bend; husband, Jon Chrysler of Republic; daughter, Soriah Hamide of Portland, OR; son, Naseem Hamide of Eugene, OR; grandson, Hassan Hamide of Eugene, OR; nephews, Jeredan Bibler of Daytona Beach, FL, and Jameson Bibler of Bend, OR; niece, Miranda Nolan (Matt, Archer) Anacortes, WA. She was preceded in death by her father. Verda’s lifelong quest for knowledge and her caring friendship will be missed by all who knew her. Memorial gifts may be made to Children’s Vision Foundation, 61451 Rock Bluff Lane, Bend, OR 97702 or Partners In Care. A celebration of her life will be held November 18, 2-4 p.m., at the Hilyard Community Center, 2580 Hilyard Street, Eugene, OR.

LONG BEACH PENINSULA, Wash. — They didn’t sign up to pick up trash. But the four-man crew working the Willapa Bay area in search of marine debris is making lemonade out of lemons — or in their case, out of the plastic foam, plastic bottles and boots that are washing up every day. Although they can’t say for sure that the debris is related to the March 2011 tsunami in Japan, things with Japanese writing and other Asia-specific items such as purple plastic foam, have come to shore in the last three weeks while the crew has been working. Other items are being cleaned up, as well — Mountain Dew bottles, Capri Sun pouches and other domestic litter items, including an Oregon Department of Corrections prison ID card. “All of us feel good when we can fill up a truck with what we find,� crew member Aaron Schlosser said. “We all kind of have a ‘high-five’ moment. But it’s a simple thing. None of us signed up to pick up trash, but we’re all really into it right now. It’s simple, but it’s rewarding.� Todd Brownlee leads the crew as the operations coordinator, a position he’s held for the last 15 years. Kevin Palmer has been with the department for seven years. Schlosser and Ian Brauner signed on in May. The crew works for the Washington Department of Natural Resources invasive species program. It’s seasonal work, and that season has commenced. But money provided by the department’s aquatic resources fund has given the crew an additional work period to clean up the debris they were finding anyway.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Team continues cleaning up Washington marine debris

Dorothy "Dolly" Simpson Nov. 10, 1928 - Nov. 7, 2012 Dorothy "Dolly" Simpson of Bend, OR, began her new journey on Nov. 7, 2012. She will be fondly remembered by many for her strong will, love of life and sense of humor. Many will remember her "Dollyisms". Dolly was born and raised in Brooklyn, N.Y., moved to Arizona with her lifelong friend and spouse, Milton "Bud" Simpson. She moved to Bend, OR in 1992. She is survived by daughters and sons-inlaws, Carolyn and Joe Hendrych, and Dorothy and Tim Grace; her grandsons and their wives, Joseph and Heather Hendrych, and Terrence and Yvette Hendrych; her great-grand daughters; and great dog. A celebration of her life will be held at a future date for close friends and family. The family wishes donations be made to Partners In Care Hospice, Bend OR. We all say goodbye to a "Classic Lady". We love you. Please sign our online guest book at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Ethel Marion Stotesbury Feb. 24, 1924 - Nov. 1, 2012 Called "Marion" to her friends, she was born in San Jose, CA. She passed away at 88 in The Dalles, OR VA Home where her husband "Bud" also passed in 2011. They were married 69 years. With Bud being a pilot in the Air Ethel Marion Force for Stotesbury 22 years, they traveled most of the world. They retired to Redmond, then finally to Sun Mountain Ranches between Sisters and Bend. Surviving children are daughter, Dolores Grayson of Tillamook, OR; son, Stephen Stotesbury and granddaughter, Brandie Stotesbury. Waud's Funeral Home in Tillamook, OR were in charge of arrangements. Their ashes will be scattered at their favorite hunting spot in the Ochoco Mountains.

The Daily Astorian

Alex Pajunas / The Daily Astorian

Kevin Palmer, from left, Aaron Schlosser, and Ian Brauner with the invasive species team at the Washington State Department of Natural Resources sort marine debris for glass, recyclables and trash at their workshop in Long Beach.

And day by day, from around 6 a.m. until the tide comes in, and again later in the day, the men are out on the banks of the river and the bay collecting everything from toilets to lawn chairs, to bottles of Japanese dish soap and Chinese shampoo. “I think one of the most interesting things we’ve found is a shampoo bottle,� Brownlee said. “It had washed all the way up into one of the natural area preserves, up one of the rivers that’s within Willapa Bay. It has Chinese writing on it, so we don’t know for sure whether it came from the tsunami. That’s one of the reasons we’re calling it marine debris because it’s very hard to trace everything back to the tsunami. “It’s kind of like a treasure hunt. We find something new every day.� When the tide comes in, the crew comes back to the workshop near the Cranberry Museum in Long Beach to sort it into piles — glass bottles, water bottle caps to keep record of how many bottles have been collected,

soda cans, other recyclables, and trash. A lot of trash, still, is local, not from overseas. “The people who are putting this stuff into the environment, they don’t want the environment to look like this,� Schlosser said. “And I don’t think people consciously say, ‘I want to do this.’ Just be more conscious with what you do. It adds up. This is the net result of it.� Brownlee added, “Even if they are littering on land, it often finds its way into the waterways.� The special items that are foreign, however, are deemed unique and placed on the shelf in the shop. So far, they have collected bottles with Asian writing, a plastic “county bear� container that was made in Japan and a wooden sculpture of a Tiki-style head. “My gut feeling is that if there had not been a tsunami in Japan people would not be as interested in marine debris, so it gives us an opportunity to educate people as well as secure some funding to ... pick up the marine debris,� Brownlee said.

Sheffer founded Symphony Space, site of NPR broadcasts in New York By Douglas Martin New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — Isaiah Sheffer, who three decades ago looked at a grimy, derelict movie theater on Manhattan’s Upper West Side and envisioned the palace of performing arts that became Symphony Space, a vibrant, eclectic institution known for its broadcasts of actors reading short stories, died Friday in Manhattan. He was 76. The cause was complications of a stroke, his wife, Ethel, said. The stage was part of Sheffer’s life even before he was born; he was still in his mother’s womb when she appeared in a Yiddish play. He went on to an exuberantly varied theatrical career as a librettist, playwright, director and impresario. But he said his professional life had “no coherence� until he and his artistic partner, the conductor Allan Miller, put on a marathon concert of Bach at the theater on Jan. 7, 1978. The next morning, he wrote down

E Deaths of note from around the world: Joseph Sargent, 83: Financier who helped found the Killington ski area in Vermont, a once little-known peak that grew into one of America’s largest winter resorts. Died Wednesday in West Hartford, Conn.

his idea for a place he had decided to call Symphony Space, in part because that was the name of the theater and in part because its first event was a symphony concert. After tens of millions of dollars raised and a decade of litigation, it became a complex of two theaters with a cafe, offices and a board directors. He was its artistic director, and would remain so for 32 years. Symphony Space is the home of a Sheffer brainstorm called “Selected Shorts,� produced by WNYC for NPR, in which actors read stories for broadcast on more than 160 radio stations nationwide. Another of his ideas was “Bloomsday on Broadway,� an annual reading of James Joyce’s “Ulysses,� of which the 31st rendition occurred this June. The Joyce events are held on June 16, the day in 1904 when Leopold Bloom, the author’s fictional Irish Jew, walks the streets of Dublin and reveals

his interior life. More than 100 actors and other notables take part in readings that last seven hours or more. Readers have included Stephen Colbert, Tony Roberts and Marian Seldes. Sheffer would add music and touches like the clatter of ale bottles behind the voices. “I’ve been asked, ‘Is this a serious literary event or a grand drunken reunion for all your actor friends?’� Sheffer said in an interview with The New York Times in 2004. “Yes!� Sheffer saw the theatrical arts as a huge adventure, and his bookings over 32 years reflected it; there were operettas, African dance and political satire. There have been jazz and opera and blues, and more of the marathon concerts that began the whole enterprise, featuring composers like Stravinsky and Sondheim. With his characteristic selfdeprecating sense of humor, Sheffer was never reluctant to mention his biggest producing failure. “Never have an accordion sextet,� he advised.

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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T W Rising prices breathe new life into gold mining in California wine region By Peter Hecht The Sacramento Bee

SUTTER CREEK, Calif. — The first time this town put a major wager on a golden future was in 1851 when a local resident, R.C. Downs, talked budding tycoon Leland Stanford into joining him in investing in an under-performing mine. That venture — and a mine renamed from the Union to the Lincoln — ultimately unearthed 100,000 ounces of gold. For years, camps in Sutter Creek and nearby Amador City roared with economic life and rolled with hard-boozing saloons and bordellos. Now, for the first time in half a century, underground gold mining has returned to the California foothills. In the grassy slopes above these Amador County towns east of Sacramento, modernday miners are blasting and mucking in pursuit of more than $1 billion in glistening deposits. That is the anticipated reward the Sutter Gold Mining Co. is banking on, based on current gold prices and projections it can unearth up to 680,000 ounces of gold. It plans to reap its haul by boring new tunnels from an old mine and exploiting multiple layers of quartz veins, snaking south to the edge of Sutter Creek and, later, north toward Amador City. Sutter Gold recently started underground development for gold exploitation. Inside earthy tunnels humming with sophisticated ventilation systems, detonation crews drill cores into rock and insert explosives, setting off three daily blasts. Miners in lighted hard-hats, driving compact diesel-powered vehicles with heavy scoops, navigate narrow arteries to clear out the rock. Though mining technology has advanced since the Gold Rush, the harsh underground pursuit is the same. “You drill, blast, muck and advance,” said Tom Apodaca, the mine supervisor. The $20 million complex includes laboratories, work buildings and a mill, where

Photos by Randall Benton / Sacramento Bee

The Sutter Creek region of California is known for its wines, but some miners, such as Ed McGoldrick, are returning to its original fame of more than 100 years ago as a gold region working inside the Lincoln gold mine.

trucks will dump tons of ore into a “jaw crusher” and a streaming network of conveyers and gold-gleaning machinery. The steel beam and concrete buildings are rippled with corrugated metal in architecture honoring the Gold Rush-era. “Everyone on our team has a passion for bringing gold mining back to the Mother Lode,” said Leanne Baker, president and CEO of Sutter Gold Mining Inc. “There’s a romance to it. There’s an excitement. We really do believe we’re making history again.” Even in her hard hat and work books, Baker, who has a doctorate in mineral economics from the Colorado School of Mines and is a former equities research analyst for Salomon Smith Barney, hardly resembles a gritty 1850s Argonaut. She laughs off comparisons to Leland Stanford, who cashed in his riches from the old Lincoln Mine to help build the first Transcontinental Railroad before becoming governor of California. Sutter Gold, a development firm whose major investor is RMB Australia Holdings, expects to pour its first gold bar in Sutter by mid-December from previously mined ore on the property just north of

Highway 49. The endeavor is the first project for the company, which also holds mining rights in a historic gold region in Baja California. Baker said Sutter Gold expects to be fully operational in Amador County — with 110 employees pulling out 150 tons of ore a day — by next spring. Despite high values for the precious metal — over $1,760 an ounce — company officials say their venture is no precursor to another Gold Rush. Since production all but collapsed during World War II, California has lagged well behind Nevada in gold extraction, and also trails Alaska, Utah and Colorado. And the Sutter project underscores the difficulty of restarting in the mining business. After Amador County supervisors approved the project in 1998, it took 14 years and more than 40 permits from myriad state and federal agencies to get the project under way. The operation is small by industry standards. Matt Owens, Sutter Gold’s Denverbased chief operating officer, said there are few modernday Stanfords lining up to invest in gold mines due to the high cost of extraction and

L.A. OKs ID cards for illegal immigrants Los Angeles Daily News LOS ANGELES — A controversial plan for the city to provide identification cards to Los Angeles residents, including undocumented immigrants, for assistance with banking and other services was approved by the City Council on Wednesday. The 12-1 vote asks banks and other financial institu-

tions to develop the program and ensure there are no costs to the city. The cards, which can also be used for city library services, could be issued for fees of $10 to $15. Officials said they wanted a report back in 90 days. “This is not a pathway to naturalization,” said Councilman Richard Alarcón, who

introduced the proposal in cooperation with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. “But it is a pathway to a better way of life.” Alarcón said the intent of the program is to help the estimated 400,000 people who are unable or afraid to use banks and don’t want to walk around with large amounts of cash or pay high rates at check-cashing stores.

lengthy permitting process. In Amador County, the company controls land that once had seven working mines. Combined, they produced 3.4 million ounces of gold before the last mine — the Eureka — closed in 1958. “I would say we haven’t really touched it — as far as the amount of gold that is still remaining in the Mother Lode,” said Paul Skinner, Sutter Gold’s chief metallurgist. In 1998, when the county approved the Sutter project, local residents were divided over mining’s return. They argued over a since-abandoned plan to bury tailings on the opposite side of Highway 49 and trucks rumbling through quaint Gold Country towns. Since then, the county has built a bypass route to Highway 49. And Sutter Gold says most traffic will be confined to the mining property, where tailings will be kept on site — most put back into the ground — “cleaner than when they came out,” said general manager Ed McGoldrich. Pat Carney, Sutter Gold’s maintenance superintendent and an Ione resident who recently worked in clay and aggregate mining, hails the region’s return to its gilded heritage. Sutter Gold is bringing in miners, mechanics, technicians, geologists and engineers to its 3.5-mile site. “It’s a beautiful thing,” Carney said. “It’s what created Amador County.” But these days, picturesque towns of Sutter Creek, home to 2,500 residents, and Amador City, population 150, celebrate the Gold Country heritage with wine and cheese and daffodil tours. So while Sutter Gold’s new employees frequent Sutter Creek restaurants, enjoying leafy cranberry and walnut salads, the place hardly resembles a roaring mining camp. “It’s just not like the old days,” said Mary Jo Pingree, manager of Sutter Creek Wine Tasting. “They’re going to find a lot of good wines and good restaurants, fine antiques and some very whimsical boutiques.”

Miners Bill Hardisty, left, and Nick Saravia work in the Lincoln gold mine, where the pursuit of a projected more than $1 billion in deposits has begun again after the mine sat unused for decades.

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

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W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.

TODAY, NOVEMBER 11

MONDAY Tonight: Snow likely.

Today: Chance of rain and snow showers.

HIGH

LOW

44 50/44

52/46

Cannon Beach 50/44

Hillsboro Portland 48/42 47/39

Tillamook 51/42

Salem

49/44

45/32

48/28

Maupin

Corvallis Yachats

48/38

53/47

41/30

48/38

Coos Bay

40/28

Oakridge

Cottage Grove

Crescent

Roseburg

54/47

Chemult

50/42

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Vale 41/27

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42/29

36/22

Jordan Valley 40/26

Rome

Klamath Falls 39/25

Ashland

53/47

North Bend

41/25

48/41

Brookings

• 52°

42/24

Chiloquin

Medford

Yesterday’s state extremes

38/24

Paisley

54/49

34/22

Frenchglen

43/23

50/41

40/28

Juntura

Burns Riley

43/30

Silver Lake

39/25

Grants Pass

Gold Beach

36/22

43/27

Christmas Valley

Port Orford

EAST Sunny to partly Ontario cloudy and cold 41/28 conditions will prevail.

Unity

Nyssa

Hampton

Fort Rock 42/29

39/26

34/21

Bandon

John Day

Brothers 41/27

La Pine 41/27

Crescent Lake

52/47

44/31

CENTRAL Clouds will increase today. Expect a chance of rain and snow late.

Baker City 38/24

Prineville 41/32 Sisters Redmond Paulina 37/28 42/30 44/31 Sunriver Bend

Eugene

Florence

41/27

35/22

Spray 47/24

39/28

51/45

37/19

Union

Mitchell 43/33

45/34

Camp Sherman

49/41

38/17

Joseph

Granite

Warm Springs

Enterprise

Meacham 41/27

40/25

Madras

37/20

La Grande

Condon

47/36

Wallowa

35/22

41/28

48/28

46/35

49/41

47/28

Ruggs

Willowdale

Albany

Newport

Pendleton

47/33

44/28

48/41

52/45

Hermiston 46/28

Arlington

Wasco

Sandy

Government Camp 34/27

47/39

47/30

The Biggs Dalles 46/33

47/41

McMinnville

Lincoln City

Umatilla

Hood River

46/36

• 13°

Fields

Lakeview

McDermitt

39/27

37/23

Burns

38/21

-30s

-20s

-10s

0s

10s

Vancouver 43/40

Yesterday’s extremes

Calgary 27/20

Billings 22/12

Portland 48/42

• 90°

Boise 38/28

Harlingen, Texas

• -6°

Cheyenne 28/16

Lewistown, Mont. San Francisco 60/50

Salt Lake City Las 33/20 Vegas 55/40

Copper Harbor, Mich.

Denver 39/16

40s

Dallas 72/40 Chihuahua 63/39

La Paz 81/60 Juneau 38/33

60s

San Francisco Chronicle

Come Wednesday, California will take its boldest, riskiest step yet to fight global warming, opening a market that for the first time will put a price on greenhouse gas emissions in the state. The cap-and-trade system, six years in the making, will force owners of power plants and factories to buy and sell permits to spew carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. If it works, trimming emissions without trashing the state’s economy, it could serve as a model for the nation. If it fails, the fallout could doom federal climate-change legislation for years to come. Under cap and trade, regulators set a limit on the amount of greenhouse gases the state’s economy can produce, lowering the limit bit by bit, year by year. Companies buy and sell permits — called allowances — to release carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases. As the cap drops, allowance prices should rise, giving companies a powerful incentive to rein in emissions. The first auction takes place Wednesday. The idea has been used since the early 1990s to cut the sulfur dioxide emissions behind acid rain, doing so at a far lower cost than critics predicted. But sulfur is relatively easy to control, because most of it comes from power plants. Carbon dioxide, in contrast, comes from electrical plants, factories, fires, cars, planes — even human breath. Still, other states and countries have tried to apply cap and trade to carbon. The European Union in 2005 created a greenhouse gas cap-and-trade system that now covers 30 countries, although experts remain divided over its success. And nine northeastern states have a carbon cap-and-trade market, but it covers only power plants. In Washington, congressional Democrats almost pushed through legislation two years ago to implement cap and trade nationwide. But the proposal

80s

90s

100s 110s

Portland 54/44 Green Bay 58/30 Detroit 65/52 Chicago 63/38

To ronto 63/52

71/54

Columbus 68/55 Louisville 71/52

Houston 82/58

Mazatlan Monterrey 84/63 87/72

FRONTS

died in the Senate, killed by Republicans convinced that global warming is either overblown or a hoax. Congress has refused to touch the issue ever since. Now public concern about climate change is rising again, fueled by Superstorm Sandy’s rampage through New York and New Jersey. A smoothly functioning carbon market in California could revive federal interest, particularly if the system draws in other states or links with Europe’s market. “We’d have a truly global cap-and-trade system, and that would shine the light on Washington and Beijing and other capitals to do something,” said Terry Tamminen, former secretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. He helped draft the state’s 2006 global warming law that led to cap and trade. For the system to be judged a success, it must cut carbon emissions without saddling California businesses and consumers with higher costs. Success is hardly guaranteed. A previous attempt to create a complex market — radically reorganizing the state’s electricity market in the late 1990s — ended in disaster. Traders at Enron and other firms discovered ways to game the system, driving up energy costs, triggering blackouts and forcing then-Gov. Gray Davis from office. Some business groups have predicted similar catastrophe with cap and trade, saying the system will jack up prices for gasoline and electricity and send California companies fleeing to other states. Several business organizations, including the Western States Petroleum Association, have launched a petition drive calling on Gov. Jerry Brown to halt the auction before it begins. He has so far declined. Should their dire forecasts prove right, cap and trade would become too toxic for any American politician to try again.

Halifax 42/34

Boston 59/51 New York 64/52 Philadelphia 66/52 Washington, D. C. 68/52

Buffalo

Charlotte 71/53

Nashville 73/56 Atlanta 71/55 Little Rock 77/44 Birmingham 73/58 New Orleans 78/67

Cap-and-trade system begins in Calif. this week By David R. Baker

70s

Quebec 35/33

St. Louis 69/33

Kansas City 55/26

Tijuana 67/49

Anchorage 31/24

50s

Winnipeg 20/17 Thunder Bay 49/28 Bismarck 18/4 St. Paul 42/22 Rapid City 26/12 Des Moines 49/26 Omaha 37/20

Oklahoma City 59/30

Phoenix 62/43

Honolulu 85/71

30s

Albuquerque 41/21

Los Angeles 67/47

HIGH LOW

48 30

49 31

BEND ALMANAC

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .8:01 a.m. . . . . . 5:05 p.m. Venus . . . . . .4:05 a.m. . . . . . 3:28 p.m. Mars. . . . . .10:03 a.m. . . . . . 6:41 p.m. Jupiter. . . . . .5:51 p.m. . . . . . 9:01 a.m. Saturn. . . . . .5:29 a.m. . . . . . 4:08 p.m. Uranus . . . . .2:47 p.m. . . . . . 3:05 a.m.

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.14” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36/28 Record high . . . . . . . . 71 in 1959 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.27” Average month to date. . . 0.37” Record low. . . . . . . . . 14 in 1985 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.30” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Average year to date. . . . . 8.14” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.30.04 Record 24 hours . . .1.03 in 1984 *Melted liquid equivalent

Sunrise today . . . . . . 6:56 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 4:42 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 6:57 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 4:41 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 4:12 a.m. Moonset today . . . . 3:12 p.m.

Moon phases New

First

Full

Nov. 13 Nov. 20 Nov. 28

OREGON CITIES

Last

Dec. 6

FIRE INDEX

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m.

Bend, west of Hwy. 97.....Low Bend, east of Hwy. 97......Low Redmond/Madras ........Low

Astoria . . . . . . . .47/29/0.00 Baker City . . . . . .36/17/0.01 Brookings . . . . . .50/36/0.00 Burns. . . . . . . . . .36/13/0.00 Eugene . . . . . . . .48/36/0.00 Klamath Falls . . .37/15/0.00 Lakeview. . . . . . .34/16/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . .39/13/0.00 Medford . . . . . . .48/37/0.05 Newport . . . . . . .50/34/0.09 North Bend . . . . .52/39/0.34 Ontario . . . . . . . .44/24/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . .37/30/0.00 Portland . . . . . . .46/37/0.00 Prineville . . . . . . .35/27/0.08 Redmond. . . . . . .38/28/0.03 Roseburg. . . . . . .50/33/0.00 Salem . . . . . . . . .47/34/0.00 Sisters . . . . . . . . .37/30/0.02 The Dalles . . . . . .49/36/0.06

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

. . . . . 50/44/r . . . . .53/43/sh . . . .38/24/sn . . . . .38/27/sn . . . .53/47/sh . . . . .57/51/sh . . . .36/21/sn . . . . . 43/24/rs . . . . . 48/38/r . . . . .52/41/sh . . . .39/25/pc . . . . .46/29/sh . . . .37/23/pc . . . . . .43/31/c . . . .41/27/sn . . . . . 43/24/rs . . . .48/41/pc . . . . .54/43/sh . . . . . 52/45/r . . . . . .54/44/r . . . . . 53/48/r . . . . .55/47/sh . . . .41/28/pc . . . . .40/30/sn . . . .47/28/pc . . . . . .48/35/r . . . . . 48/42/r . . . . .51/43/sh . . . . 41/32/rs . . . . .48/31/sh . . . .41/31/sn . . . . .48/33/sh . . . .50/42/sh . . . . .55/45/sh . . . . . 48/41/r . . . . .52/42/sh . . . . 42/30/rs . . . . .46/28/sh . . . .48/28/pc . . . . . .48/40/r

PRECIPITATION

WATER REPORT Sisters ...............................Low La Pine...............................Low Prineville..........................Low

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . 36,647 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137,195 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 72,953 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 16,540 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81,940 . . . . . 153,777 The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . 166 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . . 248 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . 23 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 706 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . . 822 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . 35 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 76.7 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 4.56 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 149 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOW MEDIUM HIGH or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 1

POLLEN COUNT

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

Saskatoon 13/12

Seattle 47/43

(in the 48 contiguous states):

• 0.82”

20s

HIGH LOW

50 30

Mostly cloudy.

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s

HIGH LOW

THURSDAY

Chance of rain showers.

Chance of rain showers.

50 32

WEST Expect cloudy skies with rain becoming likely.

Astoria

WEDNESDAY

Chance of rain showers.

HIGH LOW

31

FORECAST: STATE Seaside

TUESDAY

Orlando 81/62 Miami 81/71

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .81/63/0.00 . .68/34/pc . . 54/28/s Akron . . . . . . . . . .62/44/0.17 . . . 70/51/s . 64/33/sh Albany. . . . . . . . . .54/40/0.00 . .62/46/pc . 62/47/pc Albuquerque. . . . .53/42/0.00 . . . 41/21/s . . 47/25/s Anchorage . . . . . .33/30/0.00 . .31/24/pc . . 32/27/s Atlanta . . . . . . . . .70/42/0.00 . .71/55/pc . . .71/43/r Atlantic City . . . . .61/31/0.00 . . . 65/53/s . 66/54/pc Austin . . . . . . . . . .83/62/0.00 . . . 80/44/t . . 65/37/s Baltimore . . . . . . .63/32/0.00 . . . 67/50/s . 68/47/pc Billings . . . . . . . . . .21/9/0.17 . . 22/12/sf . 37/23/pc Birmingham . . . . .71/41/0.00 . .73/58/pc . . .63/37/t Bismarck. . . . . . . .31/21/0.73 . . . 18/4/sn . 22/11/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . . .40/22/0.00 . .38/28/pc . . 46/32/c Boston. . . . . . . . . .55/40/0.00 . .59/51/pc . 68/52/pc Bridgeport, CT. . . .55/40/0.00 . .64/51/pc . 66/52/pc Buffalo . . . . . . . . .53/43/0.00 . . . 71/54/s . . .63/38/r Burlington, VT. . . .45/33/0.00 . .53/46/pc . 65/47/pc Caribou, ME . . . . .36/28/0.00 . . . 38/34/i . 53/44/pc Charleston, SC . . .72/39/0.00 . .75/56/pc . 80/60/pc Charlotte. . . . . . . .72/31/0.00 . . . 71/53/s . 74/53/pc Chattanooga. . . . .71/37/0.00 . .70/54/pc . 63/35/sh Cheyenne . . . . . . .36/16/0.00 . . 28/16/sf . 41/26/pc Chicago. . . . . . . . .66/50/0.22 . . . 63/38/r . . 38/30/c Cincinnati . . . . . . .73/39/0.00 . . . 69/54/s . . .56/28/r Cleveland . . . . . . .63/46/0.09 . . . 69/52/s . . .60/36/r Colorado Springs .56/37/0.00 . .33/13/pc . . 50/26/s Columbia, MO . . .77/57/0.00 . .64/28/sh . . 42/26/s Columbia, SC . . . .76/34/0.00 . . . 73/56/s . 79/56/pc Columbus, GA. . . .74/39/0.00 . .77/55/pc . . .76/47/t Columbus, OH. . . .71/48/0.03 . . . 68/55/s . 56/31/sh Concord, NH. . . . .52/31/0.00 . .58/39/pc . 65/50/pc Corpus Christi. . . .88/67/0.00 . . . 82/60/t . 71/53/pc Dallas Ft Worth. . .81/65/0.00 . . . 72/40/t . . 59/35/s Dayton . . . . . . . . .69/50/0.00 . . . 66/54/s . 54/27/sh Denver. . . . . . . . . .56/27/0.24 . .39/16/pc . . 47/26/s Des Moines. . . . . .78/58/0.00 . . .49/26/c . . 34/25/c Detroit. . . . . . . . . .62/48/0.00 . .65/52/pc . . .53/34/r Duluth. . . . . . . . . .43/34/0.20 . . .46/25/c . . 30/22/c El Paso. . . . . . . . . .73/60/0.00 . .56/29/pc . . 55/33/s Fairbanks. . . . . . . .22/17/0.00 . . . 6/-12/c . -3/-27/pc Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .40/37/0.14 . .26/14/sn . 24/16/pc Flagstaff . . . . . . . .35/23/0.05 . . . 36/12/s . . 45/18/s

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .64/49/0.00 . .63/46/sh . .50/31/rs Green Bay. . . . . . .57/43/0.03 . . . 58/30/r . . 34/25/c Greensboro. . . . . .72/36/0.00 . . . 71/53/s . 70/51/sh Harrisburg. . . . . . .56/33/0.00 . . . 63/45/s . 64/44/sh Hartford, CT . . . . .57/39/0.00 . .66/49/pc . 68/48/pc Helena. . . . . . . . . . .14/5/0.05 . .24/10/pc . . 36/24/c Honolulu. . . . . . . .85/74/0.00 . . . 85/71/s . . 84/72/s Houston . . . . . . . .83/57/0.00 . . . 82/58/t . 69/40/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .72/40/0.00 . .68/56/pc . . .59/31/t Indianapolis . . . . .72/47/0.00 . .68/44/pc . . .46/28/r Jackson, MS . . . . .76/45/0.00 . . . 77/56/t . 61/35/sh Jacksonville. . . . . .72/39/0.00 . .78/58/pc . 80/60/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . . .33/26/0.00 . . 38/33/rs . 39/32/sh Kansas City. . . . . .75/65/0.00 . .55/26/sh . . 43/26/s Lansing . . . . . . . . .62/48/0.00 . .67/50/pc . .53/30/rs Las Vegas . . . . . . .53/42/0.00 . . . 55/40/s . . 61/44/s Lexington . . . . . . .70/46/0.00 . . . 70/55/s . 59/30/sh Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .78/62/0.00 . . .37/18/c . 42/22/pc Little Rock. . . . . . .76/51/0.00 . . . 77/44/t . 56/34/pc Los Angeles. . . . . .62/50/0.00 . . . 67/47/s . . 72/54/s Louisville. . . . . . . .74/48/0.00 . .71/52/pc . 55/30/sh Madison, WI . . . . .66/46/0.00 . . . 58/29/r . 34/22/sn Memphis. . . . . . . .74/50/0.00 . . . 75/49/t . 54/34/sh Miami . . . . . . . . . .78/70/0.00 . .81/71/pc . 83/72/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .65/48/0.00 . . . 58/36/r . 35/28/sn Minneapolis . . . . .69/44/0.05 . . .42/22/c . 31/21/sn Nashville. . . . . . . .73/40/0.00 . .73/56/pc . . .58/32/t New Orleans. . . . .78/54/0.00 . .78/67/pc . . .73/50/t New York . . . . . . .55/42/0.00 . . . 64/52/s . 68/50/pc Newark, NJ . . . . . .55/39/0.00 . . . 65/51/s . 65/51/pc Norfolk, VA . . . . . .68/37/0.00 . . . 70/55/s . 74/56/pc Oklahoma City . . .77/62/0.00 . .59/30/pc . . 57/32/s Omaha . . . . . . . . .77/58/0.00 . . .37/20/c . 40/21/pc Orlando. . . . . . . . .77/51/0.00 . .81/62/pc . 85/62/pc Palm Springs. . . . .67/47/0.00 . . . 68/44/s . . 74/52/s Peoria . . . . . . . . . .72/54/0.00 . . . 64/33/r . 37/25/pc Philadelphia . . . . .57/37/0.00 . . . 66/52/s . 67/50/pc Phoenix. . . . . . . . .65/54/0.00 . . . 62/43/s . . 71/48/s Pittsburgh . . . . . . .66/37/0.02 . . . 72/51/s . . .69/29/r Portland, ME. . . . .51/27/0.00 . .54/44/pc . 61/52/pc Providence . . . . . .57/38/0.00 . .60/49/pc . 68/53/pc Raleigh . . . . . . . . .74/36/0.00 . . . 73/52/s . 73/54/pc

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .34/18/0.13 . . .26/12/c . . 39/26/s Reno . . . . . . . . . . .39/23/0.03 . .42/30/pc . 53/33/pc Richmond . . . . . . .72/34/0.00 . . . 72/49/s . 72/55/pc Rochester, NY . . . .51/39/0.03 . . . 71/54/s . . 67/42/c Sacramento. . . . . .58/36/0.00 . .58/34/pc . 63/43/pc St. Louis. . . . . . . . .81/57/0.00 . . . 69/33/t . 44/29/pc Salt Lake City . . . .34/28/0.20 . . 33/20/sf . 38/27/pc San Antonio . . . . .81/64/0.00 . . . 81/47/t . 67/40/pc San Diego . . . . . . .64/57/0.04 . . . 67/55/s . . 71/56/s San Francisco . . . .59/49/0.00 . . . 60/51/s . 63/53/pc San Jose . . . . . . . .60/40/0.00 . . . 62/46/s . 63/49/pc Santa Fe . . . . . . . .50/35/0.02 . .35/11/pc . . 42/24/s

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .73/39/0.00 . .75/59/pc . 80/60/pc Seattle. . . . . . . . . .46/31/0.00 . . . 47/43/r . 51/43/sh Sioux Falls. . . . . . .54/44/0.02 . .30/17/pc . 33/19/pc Spokane . . . . . . . 31/21/trace . .33/25/pc . .36/32/rs Springfield, MO . .75/56/0.00 . . . 64/29/t . . 45/27/s Tampa. . . . . . . . . .77/55/0.00 . .82/64/pc . 84/66/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . . .63/46/0.01 . . . 58/34/s . . 69/40/s Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .76/64/0.00 . . . 59/32/t . . 52/32/s Washington, DC . .65/38/0.00 . . . 68/52/s . 69/49/pc Wichita . . . . . . . . .76/64/0.00 . .46/24/pc . . 49/28/s Yakima . . . . . . . . .41/32/0.08 . . .42/29/c . .40/31/rs Yuma. . . . . . . . . . .69/51/0.00 . . . 67/46/s . . 73/51/s

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .52/46/0.00 . .50/43/sh . 51/40/pc Athens. . . . . . . . . .64/48/0.00 . . .66/54/c . . 66/53/c Auckland. . . . . . . .64/55/0.00 . .66/54/sh . 66/57/sh Baghdad . . . . . . . .99/48/0.00 . . . 87/67/s . 79/63/sh Bangkok . . . . . . . .99/81/0.00 . . . 95/75/t . . .96/79/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .46/39/0.00 . . . 35/32/s . 43/24/pc Beirut . . . . . . . . . .73/63/0.00 . .68/59/sh . . 69/62/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .52/41/0.00 . .54/39/sh . 50/43/pc Bogota . . . . . . . . .70/43/0.00 . .61/46/sh . 63/49/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .45/28/0.00 . . . 52/38/s . 52/45/sh Buenos Aires. . . . .66/50/0.00 . .65/57/sh . 71/60/sh Cabo San Lucas . .86/68/0.00 . . . 83/62/s . 85/64/pc Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .75/64/0.00 . .73/62/pc . 75/61/pc Calgary . . . . . . . . . . .5/1/0.00 . .27/20/pc . . 35/20/c Cancun . . . . . . . . .81/60/0.00 . .80/74/pc . 81/71/sh Dublin . . . . . . . . . .46/36/0.00 . .46/38/pc . 56/51/sh Edinburgh. . . . . . .48/37/0.00 . .46/33/pc . 51/48/sh Geneva . . . . . . . . .52/48/0.00 . .51/40/sh . . 53/43/c Harare. . . . . . . . . .66/64/0.00 . . . 83/57/t . 84/60/pc Hong Kong . . . . . .84/77/0.00 . .80/69/sh . . 79/72/c Istanbul. . . . . . . . .59/54/0.00 . .62/56/sh . 64/55/pc Jerusalem . . . . . . .64/54/0.04 . .60/51/sh . 62/51/sh Johannesburg. . . .75/55/0.00 . . . 75/59/s . . .77/60/t Lima . . . . . . . . . . .68/64/0.00 . .69/64/pc . 69/63/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .64/52/0.00 . .59/47/pc . . 59/45/s London . . . . . . . . .50/39/0.00 . .48/35/pc . . 52/49/c Madrid . . . . . . . . .57/48/0.00 . .56/40/pc . . 53/37/s Manila. . . . . . . . . .91/77/0.00 . .89/76/pc . . 80/77/c

Mecca . . . . . . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . . 94/76/s . . 94/73/s Mexico City. . . . . .77/43/0.00 . .74/47/pc . 70/43/pc Montreal. . . . . . . .43/30/0.00 . .50/37/pc . . 58/43/c Moscow . . . . . . . .32/21/0.00 . .30/27/pc . . .38/34/i Nairobi . . . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . .74/58/sh . 75/58/sh Nassau . . . . . . . . .79/72/0.00 . .77/71/sh . . .80/70/t New Delhi. . . . . . .86/61/0.00 . . . 85/65/s . . 84/64/s Osaka . . . . . . . . . .64/46/0.00 . . . 62/53/r . 60/51/pc Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .43/32/0.00 . . . 42/34/r . 30/27/pc Ottawa . . . . . . . . .41/30/0.00 . .56/45/pc . . 58/35/c Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .57/45/0.00 . .52/37/pc . 51/42/pc Rio de Janeiro. . . .79/72/0.00 . .89/75/pc . . .89/75/t Rome. . . . . . . . . . .66/46/0.00 . .67/62/sh . . .68/58/r Santiago . . . . . . . .72/48/0.00 . . . 87/60/s . . 83/58/s Sao Paulo . . . . . . .82/68/0.00 . . . 86/69/t . . .83/68/t Sapporo . . . . . . not available . .51/41/sh . 52/41/sh Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .59/41/0.00 . .54/37/sh . 49/35/sh Shanghai. . . . . . . .64/57/0.00 . . . 57/49/s . 58/42/sh Singapore . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . . 84/79/t . . .83/78/t Stockholm. . . . . . .46/36/0.00 . .48/38/sh . 40/31/pc Sydney. . . . . . . . . .66/61/0.00 . .73/61/pc . 84/56/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .90/68/0.00 . .73/70/sh . 75/67/pc Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .73/61/0.00 . .69/56/sh . 71/58/sh Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . .65/54/sh . . .67/50/r Toronto . . . . . . . . .48/39/0.00 . . . 63/52/s . 59/32/sh Vancouver. . . . . . .43/36/0.00 . . . 43/40/r . 48/43/sh Vienna. . . . . . . . . .50/41/0.00 . .47/44/pc . 48/42/sh Warsaw. . . . . . . . .48/36/0.00 . .55/48/pc . . 50/37/c


COMMUNITYLIFE THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

SPOTLIGHT

TV & Movies, C2 Calendar, C3 Horoscope, C3 Milestones, C6 Puzzles, C7

C

www.bendbulletin.com/community

REMEMBERING OUR VETERANS

Gingerbread event planned Registration is now under way to submit an entry to Sunriver Resort’s 17th annual Gingerbread Junction, a display of gingerbread houses that raises money for charity. The deadline to register is Wednesday. Houses must be at least 51 percent edible. Entries can fit into small, medium or large categories, with lots selling for $15, $25 and $50, respectively. Completed houses must be brought to a drop-off site between Nov. 17 and 19. The houses will remain on display through December. Funds raised from the event — which include a match from Sunriver Resort — will go this year to Newberry Habitat for Humanity. Contact: www.sun river-resort.com/ginger bread-junction-sunriver. php or 800-801-8765.

Pie fun run on Thanksgiving FootZone will hold its seventh annual “I Like Pie” run and walk benefiting NeighborImpact at 9 a.m. Nov. 22 at the Riverfront Plaza, located behind FootZone at 845 N.W. Wall St. in Bend. Register for the 2K, 5K, 10K or 10-mile untimed events in person at FootZone. The entry fee is a suggested $5 donation and five cans of nonperishable food that will support NeighborImpact’s Food Bank. Last year 800 participants donated $5,900 and 3,860 pounds of food. Participants are encouraged to bring a pie to share or enter the pie-baking contest hosted by the Bend High Culinary Program and Sweet Home Alamode. The top three pies in the “traditional” and “open” categories will be awarded. Contact: FootZone at 541-317-3568 or www. footzonebend.com.

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

Black marble walls, bearing the names of soldiers killed during the Vietnam War, are the moist poignant feature of the Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Portland. Above each set of names, text describes the progression of the war and parallel events in Oregon.

• A personal journey through Oregon’s memorials to the fallen By John Gottberg Anderson • For the Bulletin PORTLAND —

K

reg Viestenz was just 19 when he died in Vietnam. A Private First Class in the U.S. Army’s First Air Cavalry Division, Viestenz took a bullet on Sept. 18, 1968, in Quang Tri Province.

He had arrived in Southeast Asia only a month earlier. According to reports, he was administering first aid to his wounded platoon leader when he was struck down during a search-and-clear mission. Kreg Viestenz was my friend. His home was only a few blocks from mine in Eugene, where we went to grade school and graduated from high school together. We both attended the University of Oregon until he left school to enlist halfway through his freshman year.

Gala of Trees supports charity The holidays are coming, as are opportunities to celebrate and help those in need of assistance. The Assistance League of Bend is putting on its 18th annual Gala of Trees at 6 p.m. on Friday at the Riverhouse Convention Center. The event, which includes dinner and dessert, silent and live auctions, will benefit children in need. Proceeds from the gala assist adult and children’s programs, including Operation School Bell, which provides clothing for children. Tickets cost $100 per person and can be reserved at www .assistanceleaguebend .com or by calling 541389-2075.

Contact us with your ideas Have a story idea or event submission? Contact us! • Community events: Email event information to events@bend bulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event” at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. — From staff reports

A World War I memorial on the grounds of Salem’s Veterans’ Building depicts a “doughboy” leading a charge into battle. “Their country’s call answered,” reads the text on the granite base, honoring Salem-area soldiers “who made the supreme sacrifice.”

The name of Kreg Viestenz, the author’s childhood friend, is engraved in black marble on the Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Portland’s Washington Park. Viestenz, a Private First Class in the U.S. Army, was 19 when he died in Vietnam in 1968.

Today, each time I visit ored here among the tall firs the Oregon Vietnam Veterof Hoyt Arboretum. I honor ans Memorial in Portland’s their commitments to this Washington Park, I shed a country, but I cry for the famifew tears at the foot of the pol- lies they left behind and for ished stone wall upon which the families that they never his name sired. NORTHWEST TRAVEL appears. It’s More engraved in than 47,000 Next week: America’s Car white upon American Museum in Tacoma, Wash. black marble, soldiers were in a stylish killed on the sans-serif font, at the bottom battlefield during the Vietnam of a column that lists 22 other War between 1955 and 1975. soldiers killed in 1968. I know no one of my generaI cry for Kreg. For Army tion who was not touched on SP4 Michael Bartell, 22, of some level with a sense of loss Portland. For Marine PFC from that conflict. And I know Bruce Carter, 18, of Miltonthat other generations, before Freewater. For every one of and after my own, have had a the 710 Oregon soldiers honsimilar experience.

The Korean War (1950-53) took more than 33,000 lives. World War II (1937-45) saw 291,000 American men and women lose their lives in combat. More recently, in the Persian Gulf and Afghanistan since 2001, the death toll is approaching 7,000. Today, Veterans Day, is a day that was set aside to honor all American war veterans, living and dead. President Woodrow Wilson declared the holiday in 1919, as Armistice Day following World War I, in memory of those “who died in the country’s service and with gratitude for the victory.” See Veterans / C4

Central Oregon hosting 4 Veterans Day parades By Mac McLean The Bulletin

An F-15 fighter jet will do a fly-by of gratitude over downtown Bend as it kicks off the city’s Veterans Day Parade at 11 a.m. today. Heralded as being Oregon’s second-largest Veterans Day Parade, the event will feature a display of flags, more than 1,000 veterans who will travel the parade route, and a post-parade open house at the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Northeast Bend. “It’s a community event,” said parade organizer Rabbine Harpell, who owns Azura Studio in downtown Bend. After the fly-over, parade participants will cross the Newport Avenue Bridge, also known as the Veteran’s Memorial Bridge, where a local Boy Scout troop and the Central Oregon Chapter of the Military Officers As-

sociation of America will have displayed 250 flags bearing the names of fallen soldiers. They will make a right turn onto Wall Street, head through downtown, then follow N.W. Franklin Avenue and N.W. Riverside Avenue to where the parade ends at the corner of N.W. Galveston Avenue and N.W. Harmon Blvd. Harpell said the parade route will be closed to traffic from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. After the event, Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1643 will hold a reception where members of the public can meet veterans from noon to 6 p.m. at its office on 1503 N.E. 4th St. in Bend. Today’s event will be the second largest Veterans Day Parade in Oregon after the Albany Veterans Day Parade, which has more than 200 entrants each year and is billed as the largest

Veterans Day celebration west of the Mississippi. But it certainly isn’t the only one happening in Central Oregon today. Here’s a list of what else is out there: • Madras: Parade starts at 2 p.m. at the corner of 10th and D Streets. This event will be the first Veterans Day parade Madras has had in about 30 years, parade organizer Mike Williams said. • Prineville: Parade starts at 11 a.m. on the corner of Elm Street and Fourth Street. • Redmond: Parade starts at 11 a.m. and will run down Sixth Street from Dogwood Avenue to Forest Avenue. It will be followed by a chili feed for veterans and their families from noon to 2 p.m. at VFW Post 4108’s office at 1836 S.W. Veterans Way. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin file photo

Spectators hold signs of support as a JOTRC group marches past during the 2011 Veteran’s Day parade in downtown Bend. This year’s parade is today.


C2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

TV & M ‘Family Guy’s’ future among week’s best

L M T FOR SUNDAY, NOV. 11

BEND

part miniseries covering the entire history of the human race. Sounds like a laborious homework assignment to us.

By Chuck Barney Contra Costa Times

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

DON’T MISS: “Family Guy� 9 p.m. Sunday, Fox “Parenthood� The absurdly irreverent 10:01 p.m. Tuesday, NBC animated series once canWe’ve learned our lesson: celed by Fox has now lived Never watch “Parenthood� long enough to without a box industrialcelebrate its landTV SPOTLIGHT of strength tissues mark 200th epiat hand. Tosode. In “Yug Ylimaf� (“Family Guy� spelled night’s episode finds Adam backward), Brian breaks and Kristina (Peter Krause, Stewie’s time machine, caus- Monica Potter) trying to ing reality to run in reverse juggle the demands of daily and forcing them to quickly life with her breast-cancer fix it before Stewie becomes treatment. “unborn.� The episode is fol“Whitney� lowed by a tribute featuring 8 p.m. Wednesday, NBC interviews with creator Seth The critics hated it and MacFarlane and voice talent Mila Kunis, Alex Borstein viewers mostly ignored it. Still, “Whitney� was reand Seth Green. newed and launches its secOTHER BETS: ond season tonight, replacing “The Good Wife� that sitcom with a monkey 9 p.m. Sunday, CBS that critics hated and view“The Good Wife� continues ers ignored. to attract quality guest stars as Christina Ricci drops by “Crossfire Hurricane� tonight. She plays a comedian 9 p.m. Thursday, HBO “Crossfire Hurricane� is who gets sued for indecency after baring her breasts on a an electrifying new documentary that tries to squeeze late-night talk show. the 50-year history of the “Untold History Rolling Stones into 105 minof the United States� utes. Included: Interviews 8 p.m. Monday, Showtime with band members, archiSome accused Oliver Stone val footage and lots of great of stretching the truth in his music. film “JFK,� but the direc“We Will Always Love You: tor stuck to the facts for the A Grammy Salute “Untold History of the United to Whitney Houston� States.� It’s his 10-part docu10 p.m. Friday, CBS mentary devoted to pivotal, This musical celebration but overlooked, events. has Jennifer Hudson, Celine “Mankind: The Story Dion, Usher, Britney Spears of All of Us� and others paying tribute to 9 p.m. Tuesday, History the late pop superstar. We Josh Brolin narrates the can only hope it blots out the crazily ambitious “Mankind: reality TV stain that is “The The Story of All of Us,� a 12- Houstons: On Our Own.�

700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347

ARGO (R) 12:15, 3:15, 5:50 THE PERKS OF BEING A WALL FLOWER (PG-13) 1, 4, 6:45 SAMSARA (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7 SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS (R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30 SKYFALL (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE (PG13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:15

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

ARGO (R) 12:40, 3:45, 7:10, 10 CHASING MAVERICKS (PG) 6:55, 9:45 CLOUD ATLAS (R) 12:30, 4:20, 8:05 FLIGHT (R) 12:15, 1:15, 3:25, 4:45, 6:35, 7:55, 9:50 HERE COMES THE BOOM (PG) 1:25, 4:30, 7:20, 9:55 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA (PG) 1:30, 3:55, 6:45 THE MAN WITH THE IRON FISTS (R) 1:45, 5, 7:45, 10:15 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 (R) 9:25 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 1:10, 4:05, 7:30, 10:15 SILENT HILL: REVELATION (R) 12:20 SKYFALL (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 12:50, 3:05, 3:35, 4:35, 6:25, 7, 8, 9:40, 10:10 SKYFALL IMAX (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:20, 9:35 TAKEN 2 (PG-13) 1:40, 4:55, 7:40, 10:05 WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) Noon, 1, 3:15, 4:15, 6, 9:05 WRECK-IT RALPH 3-D (PG) 12:05, 3:20, 6:10, 9:15

6:15, 9

EDITOR’S NOTES:

WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15

• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAX films. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.

SISTERS

THE CAMPAIGN (R) 9 THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN (PG) 3

Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800

PARANORMAN (PG) Noon PREMIUM RUSH (PG-13) 6:15 After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.

ARGO (R) 1, 3:45, 6:30 LOOPER (R) 6:30 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 1:30, 4 SKYFALL (PG-13) Noon, 3, 6

Tin Pan Theater

WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) 1:45, 4, 6:15

PRINEVILLE Pine Theater

869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271

MADRAS

28 HOTEL ROOMS (no MPAA rating) 6, 8:30

214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014

Madras Cinema 5

PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 1:10, 4, 7 WRECK-IT RALPH (UPSTAIRS — PG) 1, 3:40, 6:30 Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas

CHASING MAVERICKS (PG) 1:50, 4:15, 6:40 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 (R) 1:25, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30

1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

HERE COMES THE BOOM (PG) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15

SILENT HILL: REVELATION (R) 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10

SILENT HILL: REVELATION (R) 11 a.m., 1, 3, 5, 7, 9

SKYFALL (PG-13) 12:50, 3:40, 6:30

SKYFALL (PG-13) 12:45, 3:30,

WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:50

Special Holiday Bazaar Listings to appear in the Classifieds through December

Only $35.00 per week*! *Your ad will publish 7 consecutive days and is limited to one inch (10 lines of text or fewer lines with text and graphics)

Color may be added for $1.00/day extra! Call today to list your event in Classifieds! Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

541-385-5809 or 541-382-1811

Cindy

Hello my name is Cindy. I am a 3 year old long hair female cat that was brought to the shelter after my family no longer wanted to take care of me. I am now looking for a forever home to call my own where I can curl up and snuggle. I am a long hair cat so regular grooming is a must to keep me free of matting. So if you are looking for a pretty kitty to fall in love with then look no further, come down to the shelter today and adopt me!

HUMANE SOCIETY OF CENTRAL OREGON/SPCA 61170 S.E. 27th St. BEND (541) 382-3537

Weekly Arts & Entertainment

Sponsored by:

Julie Palmer

Every Friday In

L TV L SUNDAY PRIME TIME 11/11/12

*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. / Sports programming may vary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine

ALSO IN HD; ADD 600 TO CHANNEL No.

BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS

BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW KTVZDT2 , _ # / OPBPL 175 173

5:00

5:30

6:00

6:30

7:00

7:30

8:00

8:30

KATU News World News KATU News at 6 (N) ’ Ă… America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Football Night (5:20) NFL Football Houston Texans at Chicago Bears (N) ’ (Live) Ă… (8:40) Extra ‘PG’ Fat Buster! Evening News Burn Notice Unpaid Debts ‘PG’ 60 Minutes (N) ’ Ă… The Amazing Race (N) ‘PG’ Ă… KEZI 9 News World News KEZI 9 News KEZI 9 News America’s Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time (N) ‘PG’ Ă… CSI: Miami Target Specific ’ ‘14’ ›› “Ice Age: The Meltdownâ€? (2006) Voices of Ray Romano. The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Moyers & Company ’ ‘G’ Ă… Oregon Art Beat Field Guide Antiques Roadshow (N) ‘G’ Ă… National Salute to Veterans ‘PG’ Football Night (5:20) NFL Football Houston Texans at Chicago Bears (N) ’ (Live) Ă… Sports Sunday Ă… (4:00) ›› “Operation Condorâ€? We There Yet? We There Yet? Meet, Browns King of Queens Engagement Engagement Cook’s Country Test Kitchen Doc Martin On the Edge ‘PG’ ››› “Inlaws & Outlawsâ€? (2005, Documentary) ’ Ă…

9:00

9:30

Revenge Penance (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Castle ’ ‘PG’ Ă… The Good Wife (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… Revenge Penance (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Family Guy (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… Masterpiece Classic (N) ’ ‘14’ Joint Pain? Seinfeld ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ Moyers & Company ’ ‘G’ Ă…

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

(10:01) 666 Park Avenue (N) ‘14’ KATU News (11:35) Castle Dateline NBC ’ Ă… News Love-Raymond The Mentalist (N) ’ ‘14’ Ă… News Cold Case ‘14’ (10:01) 666 Park Avenue (N) ‘14’ KEZI 9 News Cook Safe News Two/Half Men Big Bang Paid Program Midsomer Murders ‘PG’ Ă… Midsomer Murders ‘PG’ Ă… Private Practice ’ ‘14’ Ă… NewsChannel 8 Chris Matthews ’Til Death ‘PG’ ’Til Death ‘PG’ ››› “World Trade Centerâ€? Clinton: American Experience ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (DVS)

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars *A&E 130 28 18 32 Duck Dynasty (4:00) ››› “The Green Mileâ€? (1999, Drama) Tom Hanks, David Morse, Michael Clarke Duncan. A guard thinks an The Walking Dead Killer Within The The Walking Dead Rick struggles (10:01) The Walking Dead Rick Talking Dead (N) Comic Book Men *AMC 102 40 39 inmate has a supernatural power to heal. Ă… group is severed. ‘14’ Ă… after another loss. (N) ‘14’ Ă… struggles after another loss. ‘14’ ‘14’ Ă… (N) ‘PG’ Finding Bigfoot: Birth of a Legend: Further Evidence ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Finding Bigfoot (N) ’ ‘PG’ Finding Bigfoot (N) ’ ‘PG’ Finding Bigfoot ’ ‘PG’ *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot ’ ‘PG’ Ă… The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Miami What Happens Housewives/Atl. BRAVO 137 44 ›› “Grumpier Old Menâ€? (1995, Comedy) Jack Lemmon. ’ Ă… (9:45) ›› “Starsky & Hutchâ€? (2004, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson. ’ CMT 190 32 42 53 (5:15) › “Son-in-Lawâ€? (1993, Comedy) Pauly Shore, Carla Gugino, Lane Smith. ’ ›› “Unraveledâ€? (2011, Documentary) 60 Minutes on CNBC Your Money Porn: Business of Pleasure American Greed Marc Dreier Octaspring Ma. SuperFood CNBC 54 36 40 52 ›› “Unraveledâ€? (2011, Documentary) Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) World According to Lance Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom World According to Lance CNN 55 38 35 48 World According to Lance Daniel Tosh: Completely Serious Gabriel Iglesias: Hot and Fluffy Jeff Dunham: Arguing Key & Peele (10:33) Tosh.0 Brickleberry Brickleberry COM 135 53 135 47 ›› “Ace Ventura: When Nature Callsâ€? (1995) Jim Carrey. Ă… (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. Desert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Adv Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 Prime Minister Road to the White House Q&A Prime Minister Road to the White House Washington This Week CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Q & A Good-Charlie Austin & Ally ’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Good-Charlie Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally ’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Shake It Up! ‘G’ Good-Charlie Austin & Ally ’ A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Bermuda Triangle Exposed ‘G’ The Devil’s Triangle ‘PG’ Ă… MythBusters (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Sex in America (N) ’ ‘MA’ Ă… Breaking Magic Breaking Magic MythBusters ’ ‘PG’ Ă… *DISC 156 21 16 37 America’s Doomsday Plan ‘PG’ (4:30) ››› “Sex and the Cityâ€? (2008) Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Chris Noth. ›› “He’s Just Not That Into Youâ€? (2009) Ben Affleck, Jennifer Aniston. Ice Loves Coco Nicki Minaj: My Chelsea Lately The Soup ‘14’ *E! 136 25 BCS Countdown MLS Soccer Conference Final: Teams TBA (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter ESPN 21 23 22 23 SportsCenter NASCAR Now (N) Ă… SportsCenter 2012 World Series of Poker Final Table From Las Vegas. NASCAR Racing ESPN2 22 24 21 24 NHRA Drag Racing Automobile Club of Southern California Finals (N) “Push: Madison Versus Madisonâ€? (2010, Documentary) Ă… “Push: Madison Versus Madisonâ€? (2010, Documentary) Ă… Unguarded Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 “Push: Madison Versus Madisonâ€? (2010, Documentary) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. ESPNFC Press Pass ESPNN 24 63 124 203 All-Access Kent SportsCenter ›› “The Last Songâ€? (2010, Drama) Miley Cyrus, Greg Kinnear, Liam Hemsworth. ›› “The Notebookâ€? (2004) Ryan Gosling. Premiere. A man tells a story to a woman about two lovers. Bunheads ’ ‘14’ Ă… FAM 67 29 19 41 Charlie Fox News Sunday Geraldo at Large (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Huckabee Stossel Geraldo at Large ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Fox News Sunday FNC 57 61 36 50 Huckabee (N) Diners, Drive The Next Iron Chef: Redemption ‘G’ Cupcake Wars (N) The Next Iron Chef: Redemption Iron Chef America (N) Restaurant Stakeout *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Mystery Diners Health Inspect Hellboy-Army ›› “X-Men Origins: Wolverineâ€? (2009, Action) Hugh Jackman, Liev Schreiber. ›› “Predatorsâ€? (2010) Adrien Brody, Topher Grace, Alice Braga. ›› “Predatorsâ€? (2010) Adrien Brody, Topher Grace, Alice Braga. FX 131 House Hunters Hunters Int’l Million Dollar Rooms ‘G’ Ă… Extreme Homes ‘G’ Ă… Property Brothers ‘G’ Ă… House Hunters Renovation (N) ‘G’ House Hunters Renovation ‘G’ HGTV 176 49 33 43 Buying and Selling ‘G’ Ă… The Men Who Built America ‘PG’ The Men Who Built America ‘PG’ The Men Who Built America The changing face of America. (N) ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ (11:02) Outback Hunters (N) ‘PG’ *HIST 155 42 41 36 The Men Who Built America ‘PG’ “The Christmas Consultantâ€? (2012) David Hasselhoff. ‘PG’ Ă… “Dear Santaâ€? (2011, Drama) Amy Acker, Brooklynn Proulx. Ă… “The Christmas Consultantâ€? ‘PG’ LIFE 138 39 20 31 “Undercover Christmasâ€? (2003) Jami Gertz. ‘PG’ Ă… Maximum Drama (N) Sex Slaves in America Lockup Inside Angola Lockup New Mexico Lockup: New Mexico Meet the Press ‘G’ Ă… MSNBC 59 59 128 51 Caught on Camera (N) Awkward. ‘14’ Awkward. ‘14’ Awkward. ‘14’ Teen Mom 2: Catch Up Special 2 Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… Jersey Shore ’ ‘14’ Ă… Teen Mom 2: Catch Up Special 2 MTV 192 22 38 57 Awkward. ‘14’ SpongeBob Deadtime Stor. Big Time Rush iCarly ‘G’ Ă… iCarly ‘G’ Ă… See Dad Run ›› “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blondeâ€? (2003) Premiere. ’ The Nanny ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘PG’ NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Oprah: Where Are They Now? ’ Oprah: Where Are They Now? ’ Oprah’s Next Chapter ‘PG’ Ă… Oprah’s Next Chapter (N) ’ ‘PG’ Oprah’s Next Chapter ‘PG’ Ă… Oprah’s Next Chapter ‘PG’ Ă… OWN 161 103 31 103 Oprah: Where Are They Now? ’ College Basketball Montana State at Seattle (N) (Live) College Football Oregon State at Stanford College Basketball ROOT 20 45 28* 26 College Football Band of Brothers Crossroads ’ ‘MA’ Ă… Band of Brothers Bastogne ’ ‘MA’ Ă… Band of Brothers The Breaking Point ‘MA’ Ă… Band of Brothers ’ ‘MA’ Ă… SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Band of Brothers Replacements ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ›› “Outlanderâ€? (2008, Action) James Caviezel, Ron Perlman, Sophia Myles. Ă… › “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobraâ€? (2009, Action) Channing Tatum, Dennis Quaid. Ă… Name of King SYFY 133 35 133 45 (4:00) ›› “The Mistâ€? (2007) Thomas Jane. Ă… Joel Osteen Kerry Shook BelieverVoice Creflo Dollar Fall Praise-A-Thon Kickoff TBN 205 60 130 ›› “The House Bunnyâ€? (2008) Anna Faris, Colin Hanks. Ă… ›› “Valentine’s Dayâ€? (2010) Jessica Alba, Kathy Bates, Jessica Biel. Ă… (DVS) ›› “Valentine’s Dayâ€? (2010) Jessica Alba. *TBS 16 27 11 28 (4:00) ›› “Shall We Dance?â€? ››› “Love Is a Many Splendored Thingâ€? (1955) Jennifer Jones. Eurasian ››› “Pickpocketâ€? ›› “The Seventh Sinâ€? (1957, Drama) Eleanor Parker, Bill Travers. Unfaithful ›› “Sherlock Holmesâ€? (1922, Mystery) John Barrymore, ››› “Sherlock, Jr.â€? (1924) Buster TCM 101 44 101 29 doctor loves married U.S. newsman in Hong Kong. Ă… woman joins doctor husband amid cholera in China. Roland Young, Carol Dempster. Keaton, Kathryn McGuire. (1959) Breaking Amish ’ ‘14’ Ă… Breaking Amish Party Time ‘14’ Breaking Amish Finale (N) ’ ‘14’ Breaking Amish: The Shunning Breaking Amish Finale ‘14’ Ă… *TLC 178 34 32 34 Breaking Amish Good vs. Evil ‘14’ Breaking Amish Final Days ‘14’ (5:45) ›› “Clash of the Titansâ€? (2010) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson. Ă… (DVS) ››› “300â€? (2007, Action) Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, David Wenham. Ă… (DVS) “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chestâ€? *TNT 17 26 15 27 Pirates-Dead Adventure Time Adventure Time ››› “Robotsâ€? (2005) Voices of Ewan McGregor, Halle Berry. Looney Tunes Dragons: Riders Cleveland Show King of the Hill King of the Hill Family Guy ‘PG’ Family Guy ‘14’ Black Dynamite *TOON 84 House Hunters House Hunters Tricked Out Trailers ‘G’ Ă… Killer RV Upgrades ‘G’ Ă… Extreme RVs (N) ‘G’ Ă… Extreme RVs (N) ‘G’ Ă… Extreme RVs (N) ‘G’ Ă… *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Extreme Houseboats ‘G’ Ă… M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H ‘PG’ NCIS Grace Period ’ ‘14’ Ă… NCIS Cover Story ’ ‘PG’ Ă… NCIS Women’s prison riot. ’ ‘14’ NCIS The Inside Man ‘14’ Ă… NCIS Endgame ’ ‘14’ Ă… › “The Ugly Truthâ€? (2009) Ă… USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS Twisted Sister ’ ‘14’ Ă… Storytellers Taylor Swift ’ ‘PG’ Rehab With Dr. Drew ’ ‘14’ Rehab With Dr. Drew (N) ’ ‘14’ Couples Therapy ’ ‘14’ Rehab With Dr. Drew ’ ‘14’ Storytellers Taylor Swift ’ ‘PG’ VH1 191 48 37 54 100 Greatest Artists of All Time PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(6:10) ›› “The Next Karate Kidâ€? 1994 Hilary Swank. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… › “Zookeeperâ€? 2011 Kevin James. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… (9:45) ››› “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the Kingâ€? 2003 Elijah Wood. Ă… ENCR 106 401 306 401 (4:35) Moby Dick ‘PG’ Ă… ›› “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaursâ€? 2009, Comedy ‘PG’ Ă… ››› “The Talented Mr. Ripleyâ€? 1999, Drama Matt Damon, Jude Law. ‘R’ Ă… FXM Presents FMC 104 204 104 120 ›› “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaursâ€? 2009, Comedy ‘PG’ Ă… Forrest Griffin: UFC Tonight The Ultimate Fighter ’ The Ultimate Fighter ’ ‘14’ UFC Fight Night UFC: Franklin vs. Le From Cotai Arena in Macao, China. The Ultimate Fighter ’ FUEL 34 Big Break Greenbrier Longest Drive Longest Drive Golf Central Golf Fitness Golf Fitness Golf Fitness Golf Fitness Golf Fitness Scottish GOLF 28 301 27 301 PGA Tour Golf ››› “A Princess for Christmasâ€? (2011) Katie McGrath. ‘G’ Ă… “The Christmas Secretâ€? (2000, Fantasy) Richard Thomas. ‘G’ Ă… “Debbie Macomber’s Call Me Mrs. Miracleâ€? (2010, Drama) ‘PG’ Ă… HALL 66 33 175 33 (4:00) “Lucky Christmasâ€? ‘G’ Ă… (3:45) “Cheaper › “Little Fockersâ€? 2010 Robert De Niro. The whole clan (7:10) ›› “Tower Heistâ€? 2011, Comedy Ben Stiller. Condo employees plot Boardwalk Empire Nucky vows to Boardwalk Empire Nucky vows to Treme Desautel’s opens; Sonny HBO 425 501 425 501 by the Dozenâ€? arrives for the Focker twins’ birthday. ’ revenge against a Wall Street swindler. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… eliminate his nemesis. (N) ’ ‘MA’ eliminate his nemesis. ‘MA’ Ă… pawns. (N) ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ›› “Star Trek: Insurrectionâ€? 1998 Patrick Stewart. Premiere. ‘PG’ (7:15) ››› “The Last of the Mohicansâ€? 1992, Adventure Daniel Day-Lewis. ‘R’ (9:45) ›› “Star Trek: Insurrectionâ€? 1998, Science Fiction Patrick Stewart. ‘PG’ IFC 105 105 ›› “The Pool Boysâ€? 2009, Comedy Matthew Lillard, Efren ›› “3000 Miles to Gracelandâ€? 2001, Action Kurt Russell. Fake Elvis imper(8:35) ››› “Chronicleâ€? 2012 Dane DeHaan. A strange ›› “In Timeâ€? 2011, Science Fiction Justin Timberlake. Time is the currency in MAX 400 508 508 Ramirez, Tom Arnold. ’ ‘R’ Ă… sonators stage a casino heist in Las Vegas. ’ ‘R’ Ă… substance gives three friends superpowers. a world where people no longer age. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… (4:00) Space Dive (N) Drugs, Inc. Hawaiian Ice (N) ‘PG’ Alaska State Troopers (N) ‘14’ Alaska State Troopers ‘14’ Drugs, Inc. Hawaiian Ice ‘PG’ Space Dive NGC 157 157 Odd Parents Wild Grinders Wild Grinders Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Robot, Monster Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob Legend-Korra Legend-Korra Dragon Ball Z Iron Man: Armor NTOON 89 115 189 115 Monsuno ‘Y7’ Realtree Road Truth Hunting Bushman Show Bone Collector Craig Morgan Red Arrow Hunt Adventure Realtree Road Live 2 Hunt Wildgame Ntn Ult. Adventures The Season OUTD 37 307 43 307 Hunt Adventure Wildgame Ntn ››› “Ransomâ€? 1996, Suspense Mel Gibson, Rene Russo. A wealthy execu- Dexter Debra meets with a local crime Homeland Dana is surprised at the Dexter Chemistry Dexter and Hannah Homeland The Clearing (N) ’ Ă… Dexter Chemistry Dexter and Hannah SHO 500 500 tive turns the tables on his son’s abductor. ’ ‘R’ Ă… writer. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… hospital. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… grow closer. (N) ’ Ă… grow closer. ’ Ă… Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain SPEED Center (N) (Live) Auto Racing My Classic Car Car Crazy ‘G’ The Hendrick Racing Story Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain SPEED 35 303 125 303 The Hendrick Racing Story (5:45) ›› “The Vowâ€? 2012 Rachel McAdams. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… (7:35) ›› “Spy Kids 3: Game Overâ€? 2003 ’ ‘PG’ ››› “Moneyballâ€? 2011, Drama Brad Pitt, Jonah Hill. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Tron: Legacy STARZ 300 408 300 408 Man of House (3:35) ›› “Beyond Bordersâ€? 2003 ››› “The Italian Jobâ€? 2003, Crime Drama Mark Wahlberg. A thief and his ››› “Our Idiot Brotherâ€? 2011, Comedy Paul Rudd, Eliza- ›› “Barry Mundayâ€? 2010, Comedy-Drama Patrick Wilson, (11:05) ›› “Crash Diveâ€? 1997 Michael TMC 525 525 Angelina Jolie. ’ ‘R’ crew plan to steal back their gold. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… beth Banks. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Judy Greer, ChloĂŤ Sevigny. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Dudikoff. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Game On! Onward Notre Dame CFL Football First Semifinal -- Edmonton Eskimos at Toronto Argonauts (N) Poker After Dark Charity in Mind NBCSN 27 58 30 209 CFL Football: Second Semifinal Bridezillas Erica & Krystal ‘14’ Biggest Bridezilla Meltdowns ‘14’ Bridezillas Natalie & Raquel ‘14’ Bridezillas Erica & Krystal ‘14’ Plat. Weddings Plat. Weddings *WE 143 41 174 118 Biggest Bridezilla Meltdowns ‘14’ Bridezillas Natalie & Raquel ‘14’


SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A & A

Divorce announcement arrives with wedding thank-you note Dear Abby: A friend’s daughter was married several years ago. I attended the shower and her wedding, and gave gifts for both. Two months after the wedding, I received a thank-you note in which a form letter was enclosed that read, “By the way, we are now separated and getting a divorce�! I was shocked not only by the news, but even more that my gifts were not returned with the divorce announcement. This young lady is now being married again to a different man. If I attend the shower/wedding, am I obligated to give her another set of gifts? Or should I skip the shower and go to the wedding without giving another gift? What is proper in this case? — Confused in Massachusetts Dear Confused: The rule of etiquette regarding disposition of wedding gifts when a couple divorces after a short time is that any UNUSED items (preferably in their original packaging) go back to the givers. However, to return cookware, linens, china, glassware, etc., that have been used is impractical, so please don’t hold a grudge. If you decide to attend the shower and/or wedding for your friend’s daughter, it is customary to give a gift. Dear Abby: I recently began a new job, and although I love what I do, I have only one problem. My boss, “Harold,� does not like eating lunch by himself. Every day, he asks me what I’m doing for lunch. If I say I brought my lunch, he wants me to eat it in his office with him. If I tell him I’m going out, he wants us to go out together. I don’t think he’s attracted to me; I just think he hates being alone. He’s entirely too clingy, and I feel my lunch break is supposed to be a time to do whatever I want to do.

This year you often seek clarity by taking a walk, doing yoga and/or participating in some other activity that helps ground you. Your psychic energy is unusually high, and you frequently will test it out. If you are single, check out a new person very carefully ‌ even if you are introduced to him or her by a friend or family member. This person might not be exactly as he or she portrays him- or herself to be. Romance could flood into your life anyway. If you are attached, a partner could be very helpful. LIBRA understands you better than you do! The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH As assertive as you are, confusion floats around in your mind. Ask a question or two to help verify what is happening. You are upbeat and positive despite not being sure of a situation. A partner shares his or her feelings. Tonight: Follow someone’s lead. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Focus on the task at hand, whether it be making cookies with a child, playing cards with friends or even playing chess against your computer. Clear up a misunderstanding with a friend. Tonight: Consider the option of being a couch potato. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Honor the differences between you and your loved ones. You could be overwhelmed by the possibilities. Remain upbeat and direct. Caring surrounds you, be it from a new love interest or from a compassionate child. Tonight: Put on your dancing shoes. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH You like what is happening with a special person at a distance. This person has a role as a dominant force in your decision-making. You are able to connect with a family member like you have not in a while. Listen to this person. Tonight: Happy close to home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You say exactly what is on your mind. You might think you are expressing yourself in a clear and direct manner, yet others easily become confused. You will want to let them ask all the questions they need. Tonight: Meet a friend for dinner.

C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY DEAR A B B Y I don’t believe the last lady who worked for him had a problem with this, but I do. How do I tell him “no� without offending him or hurting his feelings? — Lunch Buddy in South Carolina Dear Lunch Buddy: Tell your boss politely but firmly that you need your lunch hour to perform personal tasks — go shopping, make personal phone calls or catch up on some reading. You are entitled to that break time, and that is what it should be used for. Dear Abby: A family member has six cats and wants to have the Thanksgiving meal at her house. Every time I eat there, I find cat hair on the table, on the plates and in the food. I don’t want to cause hard feelings, but how do I handle this? I’m allergic to cats. — Hold the Fur in Amarillo, Texas Dear Hold The Fur: Your health must come first. Arrange to celebrate Thanksgiving elsewhere and curtail your visit. If the relative attempts to “guilt� you into changing plans, explain that you cannot because you have become allergic to cat hair and dander and your doctor has instructed you to avoid exposure. Dear Readers: Today is Veterans Day, and I would like to take this opportunity to thank not only our veterans, but also those men and women who are still on active duty for their service to our country. — Abby — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Sunday, Nov. 11, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar

C3

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You might be quite concerned about your finances. If you are in a partnership with joint assets, you could become even more concerned, as you’ll find your partner to be unusually overgenerous. A parent or someone you look up to makes demands. Tonight: Make it your treat. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Be direct with a partner. You can afford to lay your cards on the table. An intellectual hunch of yours is right-on. Follow through on it, and you might be surprised by the end result. Express your caring in a way that others can hear. Tonight: Whatever puts a smile on your face. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Listen to the whispers around you — there might be some validity to be found. Until you confirm what you hear, stay neutral. You might discover that the right thought or the right sentence could open someone up. Tonight: Let your creativity flow. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Listen to a friend’s suggestions. You might be surprised by the sudden lack of direction or confusion on the homefront. Others’ positive energy flows and helps you sort out a situation. Discussions help clear the air. Tonight: Where your friends are. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Take a stand, and you’ll accomplish far more than you thought possible. Your instincts will carry you through a problem, though at first you might not be exactly sure whether you are on the “rightâ€? side. Continue to trust your sixth sense. Tonight: Visit with a loved one. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You could discover that a financial situation has caught up to you. It might not be as bad as you think. Get several different opinions, and you will feel supported. Allow more of your childlike spirit to come out. Tonight: Let the good times roll. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Talk with others directly. Confusion keeps coming up, so take a pass if you are not sure. You will be a lot happier with the end results. Someone shares his or her feelings to the extent that you might even blush. Tonight: Togetherness works. Š 2012 by King Features Syndicate

AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Arthur Lezin talks about his book, “From Afghanistan to Zaire — Reflections on a Foreign Service Life�; free; 11 a.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 or www. athousandlettershome.com. BEND VETERANS DAY PARADE: Themed “Fulfilling our promises to men and women who served�; with a flyover; free for spectators; 11 a.m.; downtown Bend; 541-480-4516. CROOK COUNTY VETERANS DAY PARADE: Parade begins on 4th and Elm St. and continues to Ochoco Creek Park; followed by a ceremony; free; 11 a.m., 10:30 a.m. staging; downtown Prineville; 541-447-2329. MINING DAYS: Experience the life of a placer miner and pan for gold; $2 panning fee, plus museum admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. REDMOND VETERANS DAY PARADE: Parade honoring veterans, followed by a chili feed for veterans and their families at the VFW post; free; 11 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-280-5161. THE NATURE OF WORDS: Paisley Rekdal recites a selection of her poetry and singer-songwriter Kevin Gordon performs; free; 11 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-647-2233, info@ thenatureofwords.org or www. thenatureofwords.org. VETERANS DAY SERVICE: Service will be followed by an open house at the American Legion Post 45; free; 11 a.m.; La Pine Community Cemetery, U.S. Highway 97 and Reed Road; 541-948-5327. VFW OPEN HOUSE: Meet military service members and veterans in honor of Veterans Day; free; 11 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. EMPTY BOWLS: Eleventh annual event features gourmet soup and a selection of artisan bowls, with live music; proceeds benefit NeighborImpact; SOLD OUT; 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-280-0284 or www.emptybowlsbend.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Randy Weinreb reads from his book, “One Boy of Ten: The Life and Times of Lazarus Leslie Weinreb�; free; 1 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. MUSIC IN PUBLIC PLACES: Featuring a performance by symphony musicians performing with pianist Scott Michaelsen; free; 1 p.m.; Jefferson County Senior Center, 860 S.W. Madison St., Madras; 541-317-3941 or www. cosymphony.com. THE CALDECOTT AWARD: Learn about the process and criteria for selecting the annual award recipient; free; 1:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7099 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. “IT’S ONLY MONEY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. MADRAS VETERANS DAY PARADE: Parade honoring veterans, followed by a chili feed for veterans and their families at the VFW post; free; 2 p.m.; no venue, D and 10th streets; 541-382-8281. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Hans Biglajzer reads from his book, “Kristallnacht: Prelude to Destruction�; free; 3 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. MUSIC IN PUBLIC PLACES: Featuring a performance by symphony musicians performing with pianist Scott Michaelsen; free; 4 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 N.W. 19th St., Redmond; 541-317-3941 or www.cosymphony.com. “A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM�: The Bend High School drama department presents the play by William Shakespeare; $5, $4 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-383-6290.

Spokesman file photo

Madras High School’s Army JROTC unit, including its color guard and drill team, marched in Redmond’s 2009 Veterans Day Parade. Today, parades are planned in Bend, Redmond, Madras and Prineville, as well as a Veterans Day service in La Pine. ROBERT CRAY: The veteran blues star performs; SOLD OUT; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. CRUSHED OUT: The rock bands performs, with Dirty Filthy Mugs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand.

MONDAY CASCADE HORIZON BAND: The senior band performs popular Americana music, with a tribute to Stephen Foster; free; 2 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-639-7734, cascadehorizonband@aol.com or www.cascadehorizonband.org.

TUESDAY AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Julia Kennedy Cochran presents her father’s memoir, “Ed Kennedy’s War: V-E Day, Censorship and the Associated Press�; free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Library, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7257. KNOW HUMOR: IS LAUGHTER THE BEST MEDICINE?: Carol Delmonico discusses the power of laughter and how it can reduce stress, boost your immune system and help you enjoy life; free; 4:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1034. “BRING OUT YOUR DEAD!� LECTURE SERIES: Featuring a presentation on “Cranial Injuries and Criminals: Understanding Brain Function Through Mishaps and Mayhem�; free; 6-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7786. THE CALDECOTT AWARD: Learn about the process and criteria for selecting the annual award recipient; free; 6:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7099 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. JIM BRICKMAN: The solo pianist, vocalist and composer performs “On a Winter’s Night�; $44-$73 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.

WEDNESDAY ACOUSTIC OPEN MIC: with Bobby Lindstrom; 6 p.m.; Taylor’s Sausage Deli & Pub, 913 N.E. 3rd St., Bend; 541-383-1694. “REEL INJUN�: A screening of the 2009 documentary film, with a panel discussion on stereotypes of Native Americans in film and cinema; free; 6:30-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-3782. “THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: OTELLO�: Starring Renee Fleming, Johan Botha and Michael Fabiano in an encore performance of Verdi’s masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. CAS HALEY: The Austin, Texasbased singer songwriter performs, with Brent Alan; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. “ASSASSINS�: Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history’s most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. “IT’S ONLY MONEY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12

students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. KITES & CROWS: The Ashlandbased indie-folk group performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-7280879 or www.reverbnation .com/venue/thehornedhand.

THURSDAY THE LIBRARY BOOK CLUB: Read and discuss “The Sisters Brothers� by Patrick deWitt; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. IN THE MOOD: A 1940s musical revue featuring The String of Pearls Big Band Orchestra, singers and swing dancers; $35-$59 plus fees; 3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. THE CALDECOTT AWARD: Learn about the process and criteria for selecting the annual award recipient; free; 4:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541617-7099 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. “EL MARIACHI�: A screening of the 1992 R-rated film about a traveling mariachi mistaken for a murderous criminal who must hide from a gang; free; 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-318-3782. CHICKS WITH PICKS: Featuring performances by four local femalefronted bands; proceeds benefit Saving Grace; $5; 6-10 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 971-570-7199. SERENDIPITY WEST FUNDRAISER: A dinner and a silent auction, with a demonstration by local teens; registration requested; all proceeds benefit the anti-bullying program Challenge Day, organized by the Serendipity West Foundation; $40; 6 p.m. dinner, 5:30 p.m. cocktail hour and auction; Chow, 1110 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-382-1093. SUSTAINABLE RESOURCE LECTURE SERIES: Environmental activist and journalist Ed Marston talks about Oregon’s conflict resolution between ranchers and environmentalists; free; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. “HOW DID WE GET HERE?� LECTURE SERIES: Featuring a presentation on “Monkey Business: The Impact of Global Change on Human and Monkey Evolution in Africa�; $10, $8 Sunriver Nature Center members, $3 students, $50 for series; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394. “TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD�: A screening of the 1962 unrated film based on Harper Lee’s book, with an introduction by Robert Osborne; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com. AUDUBON SOCIETY BIRDERS’ NIGHT: Learn how to invite birds for viewing and play a “Mystery Bird� photo game; free; 6:30 p.m. social; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. “ASSASSINS�: Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history’s most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. “IT’S ONLY MONEY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.

IN THE MOOD: A 1940s musical revue featuring The String of Pearls Big Band Orchestra, singers and swing dancers; $35-$59 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. BOBBY JOE EBOLA AND THE CHILDREN MACNUGGITS: The California-based rock group performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation .com/venue/thehornedhand.

FRIDAY HUMANE SOCIETY ART FUNDRAISER: Featuring fine art sale and a social; proceeds benefit the Humane Societies of Central Oregon and Redmond; free; 4-7 p.m.; Jewel Images Portrait Studio, 550 S.W. Industrial Way, #45, Bend; 541-330-7096. “SUPERHEROES OF STOKE�: A screening of the Matchstick Productions ski film; $12 plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. “ASSASSINS�: Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history’s most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. “IT’S ONLY MONEY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. “THE LAST EMPEROR�: A screening of the PG-13-rated 1987 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. jcld.org. “SUPERHEROES OF STOKE�: A screening of the Matchstick Productions ski film; $12 plus fees; 9 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. JIVE COULIS: The funk-rock act performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.

SATURDAY “ASSASSINS�: Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history’s most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. VFW DINNER: A dinner of ham and scalloped potatoes; proceeds benefit local veterans; $8; 5-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. “SLEEPWALK WITH ME�: A screening of unrated comedy by Mike Birbiglia about an aspiring stand-up comedian’s experience with sleepwalking; $9 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. THE NORTHSTAR SESSION: The California-based roots-rock band performs; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www. bendticket.com. “IT’S ONLY MONEY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

The Garden of Solace sits at the center of the Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial in the Hoyt Arboretum in Portland. A paved walkway spirals uphill around the lawn in a counterclockwise direction, passing marble walls that pay tribute to the war’s victims.

Veterans Continued from C1 It was expanded to include all vets and renamed in 1947. Make plans today, or sometime soon, to visit a veterans memorial to pay tribute to those who have fought to protect American freedom. The Oregon Department of Veterans’ Affairs (ODVA) lists more than 200 sculptures, plaques and other tributes to veterans, in 111 Oregon communities. The full list is available on its website, www.oregon.gov/odva/.

Portland Unsurprisingly, Oregon’s largest city and the state’s capital have the largest number of memorials. My favorite, as I said, is the 3¼-acre Oregon Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington Park’s Hoyt Arboretum in Portland. Just uphill from the Oregon Zoo and World Forestry Center, a paved, wheelchair-accessible walkway spirals around a finely manicured Garden of Solace, a circular lawn surrounded by hedges and flowers. The walkway winds in a counterclockwise direction, passing marble walls that identify the war’s victims. Along with the list of names, engraved texts describe the progression of the Vietnam War, interspersed with events back home in Oregon during the same time span to give perspective. A plaque in remembrance of soldiers missing in action fills the final wall before the walkway continues into the Arboretum. At the heart of downtown

The Afghan-Iraqi Freedom Memorial, on the grounds of the Veterans’ Building in Salem, was dedicated on Veterans Day 2006. Its centerpiece is an illuminated fountain designed to resemble the globe, with a soldier kneeling above it.

Some cities with veterans memorials in Oregon The Dalles Portland Sandy Wilsonville Canby McMinnville St. Paul Lincoln City Salem Depoe Bay Siletz Adair Village Newport

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Portland is a Civil War memorial unveiled in 1928: a 10-foot bronze statue of Abraham Lincoln. He stands with bowed head, in deep sadness over the most devastating war in American history. So moving is the South Park Blocks tribute that the entire block, between Madison and Main streets, is known as Lincoln Square. Also downtown is a replica of the Liberty Bell, a commemoration of the American War of Independence, outside of City Hall on Fourth Avenue between Madison and Jefferson streets. And a few blocks away, on the banks of the Willamette River north

If you go Oregon Department of Veterans Affairs. 700 Summer St. N.E., Salem; 503-373-2386 (public affairs), www.oregon.gov/odva/

of the Burnside Bridge (Naito Parkway and Front Avenue), stands the city’s U.S. Merchant Marine and Liberty Ship Memorial. Across the river in northeast Portland, a Korean War Memorial — a wall of black marble with engraved gold-leaf lettering — is in the South Court area of Memorial Coliseum. On Sandy Boulevard at Northeast 48th Avenue stands a flagpole that is lit day and night to honor veterans. And in Willamette National Cemetery (Mount Scott Boulevard at Southeast 112th Avenue), an impressive Korean Veterans War Memorial of three polished, black-granite walls that was dedicated in 1996 to honor Oregon veterans of the Korean War.

Salem

A statue of President Abraham Lincoln, his head bowed in sadness, is at the heart of Lincoln Square in downtown Portland’s South Park Blocks. The 10-foot bronze was unveiled in 1928 as a Civil War memorial.

The greatest concentration of veterans’ memorials are in Salem, on the grounds of the ODVA Veterans’ Building (700 Summer Street Northeast), a few blocks north of the State Capitol. Most impressive of the lot is the elegant Afghan-Iraqi

Freedom Memorial, dedicated on this date six years ago. A soldier kneels above an illuminated, circular fountain designed to resemble the globe, a stream of water shooting upward from its center. Facing the fountain to the east, a polished granite wall — with the engraved declaration, “Freedom Isn’t Free” — honors 133 (and counting) Oregon men and women who have died in the war against terror. In the same area, on the north side of the Veterans Building, is a Veterans of Foreign Wars Monument with a soldier atop a globe; a Korean War Memorial shaped like a temple gateway; and a small obelisk that pays tribute to Oregon’s Medal of Honor winners. The grounds also feature a World War I “doughboy” statue honoring Salem-area soldiers “who made the supreme sacrifice”; a plaque honoring Spanish-American War veterans; and the bell from the USS Sederstrom, a famed World War II destroyer named for a Salem naval officer who was killed in the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. Continued next page

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Malone Park, north of the Grant County Fairgrounds, honors “those who served our country, and in particular those who made the ultimate sacrifice.” In front of the Malheur County Courthouse in Vale, an upright granite stone features a brass plaque with a dedication “to those who offered their lives to the Great War of Nations, 1914-1918.”

From previous page On either side of the State Capitol, surrounding the U.S. and state flagpoles, 13 granite pillars make up the Oregon Veterans Medal of Honor Memorial, dedicated in 2004. Attached to each is a bronze plaque with an image of the medal recipient and full text of his official citation. Another pillar carries a plaque that acknowledges Medal of Honor recipients with ties to Oregon, but who did not enter the service from this state. Another monument is under construction on the west side of the State Capitol campus: Ground was broken in June for an Oregon World War II Memorial, highlighted by a five-sided, 33-foot-tall granite obelisk. Honoring the 3,758 Oregonians who died during the Second World War in Europe and in the Pacific, it is being erected near the intersection of Court and Cottage streets.

Central Oregon

Greater Portland The most elaborate veterans’ memorial outside of Portland and Salem may be the one that dominates 5½-acre Town Center Park in Wilsonville, about halfway between the two cities. The Oregon Korean War Memorial, dedicated in 2000, features a 109-foot wall of red Carnelian granite, upon which are engraved the names of 287 Oregonians killed, and nine missing in action, during the Korean War. Two rows of cherry trees line a 500-foot concrete path that curves past bronze plaques that describe the war’s progress in considerable detail. The flags of the United States, South Korea, Oregon and the United Nations fly above the wall and a brick terrace bearing the names of donors who contributed to build the $450,000 memorial. One 15foot section honors the Korean nation, which lost nearly 1 million of its people in the war. Just completed in Canby is the Vietnam Era Veterans’ Memorial, on state Highway 99 East near the Canby Square Shopping Center. It was designed, according to its website, as “an extraordinary place of healing that honors everyone who served our nation during the Vietnam War Era.” In the heart of the small park, a “Huey” medevac helicopter hovers above a stylized landing pad. A statue depicts a soldier carrying a wounded comrade whose hand is held by a young Vietnamese girl. A Buddhist temple bell beside a water feature bears the inscription, in Vietnamese, “Believe in peace.” The Sandy Veterans Memorial, at the west entrance to downtown on U.S. Highway 26, is an eight-foot bronze statue of a soldier that honors all veterans with the words, “Never to be forgotten.”

The I-5 corridor Many of the communities along Interstate 5, and within a few miles of the freeway, offer their own tributes to military veterans. These are some of the memorials, from north to south: In St. Paul Pioneer Cemetery, a Wall of Remembrance honors all early pioneers and Native Americans known to have been interred in the cemetery. Many

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

Four separate monuments comprise the Mid-Columbia Veterans Memorial, which overlooks the Columbia River in The Dalles. They include tributes to veterans of the Spanish-American War, the Vietnam War and Desert Storm.

of their graves were inadvertently bulldozed in the 1930s in a misguided cleanup attempt. On the lawn of the Yamhill County Courthouse in McMinnville, the statue of an armed soldier stands in tribute to veterans of all wars. The former military training site at Adair Village, north of Corvallis, honors World War II veterans with engraved stones in the Camp Adair Memorial Garden. In Eugene’s Skinner Butte Park, 451 Lane County veterans, killed in wars from World War I through Desert Storm, are cited on a marble Wall of Honor memorial. About 15 miles south of Roseburg, in Myrtle Creek, the Veterans Memorial and Rose Garden features a stonework wall with bronze plaques listing names of veterans killed in World Wars I and II, Korea, Vietnam and the Persian Gulf. Grants Pass has two memorials in Riverside Park, five blocks apart, honoring Josephine County veterans, including “the wounded, the disabled and the MIA-POW.” In nearby Merlin is the Josephine County Veterans Walk of Honor and Memorial. In Medford, the Veterans Park Memorial has seven pedestals that pay tribute to the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, National Guard and Merchant Marine. Another monument displays the names of 368 men from southern Oregon killed in action.

The coast The Oregon Coast was more involved in World War II than most people know: The only incident of Japanese bombing on the American mainland during World War II took place at Brookings. In September 1942, a submarine-based Yokosuka seaplane dropped two small bombs into the coastal forest off Constitution Way — but rain and heavy mist prevented them from igniting even a small fire. A historical marker recalls the event. In Brookings’ Ward Memo-

rial Cemetery, a new veterans’ memorial was dedicated on Memorial Day 2012, its memorial walkway passing a row of 3-by-6-foot marble panels reminiscent of the national Vietnam Veterans Wall in Washington, D.C. On July 4, 35 miles up U.S. Highway 101 in Gold Beach, ground was broken on a new Curry County Veterans Memorial. Reedsport’s Masonic Cemetery features a granite gravestone placed by the American Legion for an Unknown Soldier, whose uniformed remains washed up on a beach during World War II. Florence’s Veterans Memorial Park, beside the Siuslaw River in Old Town, features a memorial wall whose bricks are inscribed with the names of veterans. In Newport’s Nye Beach area, the Vietnam Veterans Commemorative Walk Memorial exhibits a “history-telling wall” installed in 2005. In the Siletz Native American Cemetery, 20 miles northeast, the Native American Veterans Memorial lists all Siletz tribe members who served in all branches of the Armed Forces. A memorial in Depoe Bay Park, dedicated on Veterans Day 1999, is a cement pyramid that honors all veterans. Inside it was placed a time capsule with personal stories, business cards and newspaper stories. On the west side of the Chinook Winds Casino in Lincoln City, the American Veterans and Desert Storm Memorial pays tribute to past and present veterans. Designed by Shilo Inns owner Mark Hemstreet, it was dedicated in 1994.

The Gorge and east One of Oregon’s most memorable sites is the Mid-Columbia Veterans Memorial, which overlooks the Columbia River and the city of The Dalles from the heights of Kelly Viewpoint, at Sorosis Park. Four separate monuments stand here, including stones that honor veterans of the Spanish-American War, the Vietnam War and Desert

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Storm. Another pays tribute to a Dalles serviceman, Loren Kaufman, awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions in Korea in 1950. The principal memorial, topped by a bronze eagle taking flight, features a bronze cast of a Second World War soldier. He is surrounded by 58 tiny plaques, each of which lists a different conflict to which American soldiers responded between 1898 and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Although the population of the eastern half of Oregon is sparse, there are more communities here with veterans memorials — more than 30, by the ODVA’s count — than in any other part of the state. Four stones placed in Pendleton’s Veterans Memorial Gardens by the Veterans of Foreign Wars carry the names of Umatilla County soldiers killed or declared missing in action during 20th-century wars. A fifth stone symbolizes those who may later lose their lives in war. On the nearby Umatilla Indian Reservation, in the center of the tribal government complex, the Nix Ya Warriors Memorial honors veterans of the Umatilla, Walla Walla and Cayuse tribes. Harney County’s largest flag, 30 feet high and 50 feet long, flies from a 120-foot flagpole that is illuminated 24 hours a day. Beside U.S. Highway 20 near the city lines of Hines and Burns, it remembers veterans who served and died for this country. A flag terrace in John Day’s

There are at least 18 war memorials in Central Oregon, according to the ODVA, and eight of them are in Bend. Deschutes Memorial Garden offers four. Most visible is a curved, 27-foot block wall, dedicated to all veterans, that surrounds a 50-foot flagpole with a plaque at its base that specifically honors Korean War veterans. Another 5-foothigh, 7-foot-long granite memorial lists 27 Central Oregonians killed in Vietnam. In front of the Deschutes County Courthouse, a lighted flagpole rises above a 6-by-6foot concrete memorial that honors veterans and first responders. Far more recent in construction is the Randy Lee Newman Memorial Walkway, which crosses Veterans Memorial Bridge on Newport Avenue at Drake Park. Dedicated five years ago, it is marked by a pair of granite monuments. Sunriver, as many people know, had its origin as the Army Corps of Engineers’ Camp Abbot training facility during World War II. Plaques and photographs may be seen in the Great Hall and at the

C5

Sunriver Nature Center. South of Sunriver, at Milepost 8 on South Century Drive, the Robert D. Maxwell Veterans Memorial Bridge honors all past, present, and future veterans from Deschutes County. There’s one veterans’ memorial in Sisters and three in Prineville. In Redmond, a concrete-block memorial stands at the base of a flagpole in the center of Redmond Memorial Cemetery. It is dedicated “in memory of those men and women who gave their lives for their country.” The Rex T. Barber Memorial Bridge, which crosses the Crooked River on U.S. Highway 97 at Milepost 112, honors World War II fighter pilot Barber, a native of Culver. And Cal Butler Veterans Memorial Parkway, which bypasses downtown Redmond on U.S. 97, is named for the Redmond native who flew patrol at Omaha Beach during the D-Day landing and who returned home to found Butler Aircraft. Barber and Butler were lucky. They lived full lives. Barber was 84 when he died in 2001. Butler died in 2004 at the age of 85. I wonder what Kreg Viestenz might have done with his life, were he with us today. Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

M

Milestones guidelines and forms are available at The Bulletin, or send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Milestones, The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. To ensure timely publication, The Bulletin requests that notice forms and photos be submitted within one month of the celebration.

E

B Delivered at St. Charles Bend

Fox—Zachary Peyton Fox, of Prineville, and Mason Zachary, of Culver, plan to marry Dec. 8 at Box R Ranch in Ashland. The future bride is the daughter of Shannon and Kim Fox, of Prineville. She is studying dental assisting at Central Oregon Community College. She works for Carson Oil Company. The future groom is the son of Matt and Stacie Zachary, of Culver. He works for Earth Designs Landscaping.

Joseph McInturff and Tabitha Glenn, a boy, David Ethan Thomas McIntire, 7 pounds, 15 ounces, Oct. 18. Andrew and Jennifer Sawyer, a boy, Kayne Airam Sawyer, 6 pounds, 10 ounces, Oct. 18. Keith and Katelyn Slater, a girl, Keirdyn Alsea Slater, 8 pounds, 6 ounces, Oct. 19. Shannon Gasper and Carolyn Schroeder, a boy, Christopher Gasper, 6 pounds, 1 ounce, Oct. 24. David Sorvisto and Michelle

Peyton Fox, left, and Mason Zachary.

Arvin, a girl, Payten Marie Sorvisto-Arvin, 7 pounds, 3 ounces, Oct. 18. Nicholas and Natalie Barnhouse, a boy, River James Barnhouse, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, Oct. 22. Micah Reid and Brittani Boltz, a girl, Kara Anne Reid, 6 pounds, 6 ounces, Oct. 25. Kody and Ashley Riste, a girl, Lillian Christine Riste, 7 pounds, 12 ounces, Oct. 25.

Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Richard and Jessica Yozamp, a boy, Jagger James Yozamp, 7

pounds, 1 ounce, Oct. 19. James Micheal Cox Jr. and Tandra Schwerbel, a girl, Trinity Arrayah Cox, 6 pounds, 13 ounces, Oct. 19. Heriberto and Rosario Aviles, a boy, Yareth Aviles Garcilazo, 6 pounds, 15 ounces, Oct. 9. Hiram and Keri Francek, a girl, Kinley Elizabeth Francek, 6 pounds, 10 ounces, Oct. 25. Justin Dice and Ashley Korich, a girl, Scotlyn Averie Dice, 8 pounds, 13 ounces, Oct. 20. Heber Morales Flores and Beria Arceo Valerio, a boy, Everlee Eliu’ Morales Arceo.

“For 26 years, we have been told that Michael was never found. Yet, he was found five months after he was shot down and then buried without our knowledge in the Tomb of the Unknowns. … I want to bring my son home.” — Jean Blassie, mother of Air Force 1st Lt. Michael Blassie, who was killed in the Vietnam War

Hearts and bones: the soldier who wasn’t unknown By Bill Thomas Special to The Washington Post

Air Force Col. Patricia Blassie rolls a black suitcase into the living room of her neatly furnished home near Denver. She opens it and pulls out a piece of nylon flight suit. “This was Michael’s,” she says, carefully placing it on the coffee table before reaching back into the suitcase. Out comes part of a pistol holster, followed by a portion of parachute, then a flattened one-man life raft that she unfolds on the floor. After all this time, the rubber raft is stiff and cracked. These reminders of the last seconds of her brother’s life were found in South Vietnam, where his plane crashed in flames 40 years ago. Also recovered were six human bones, originally identified as her brother’s, then reclassified as “unknown.” It would take decades, but eventually those bones would help solve one of the U.S. military’s longest-running cases of mistaken identity. In post-Vietnam Washington, what began to matter most was putting the divisive conflict to rest, moving debate about Vietnam from politics to history by honoring an anonymous soldier killed in the war. The problem was finding one. “In the end, all you have is your name,” says Patricia Blassie, as she packs away her brother’s things. “When that’s taken away, you’re left with nothing. We just wanted Michael’s name back.”

May 11, 1972 Lt. Michael Blassie, a 1970 graduate of the Air Force Academy, learned to fly A-37s at Columbus Air Force Base in Mississippi. When he took off from the American base in Bien Hoa that May morning, Blassie, who had arrived in South Vietnam less than four months earlier to join the 8th Special Operations Squadron, had already flown 130 combat missions. Shortly after starting his initial strike on an artillery position outside An Loc near the Cambodian border, a burst of tracer rounds was seen coming toward Blassie’s plane. His flight commander, Maj. James Connally, described what happened next in a letter to Blassie’s parents: “Mike’s aircraft was hit and began streaming fuel. He must have been killed instantly, because he did not transmit a distress call of any kind. The aircraft flew a short distance on its own and then slowly rolled over, exploding on impact in enemy-held territory.” The day following Blassie’s death, his parents in St. Louis were visited by an Air Force chaplain who informed them that their son had been killed in action, but his body could not be recovered. This would be the same official explanation the Blassie family would hear for the next 26 years. “My father, who served in Normandy during World War II, never got over losing Michael,” says Patricia Blassie, who was 13 years old when her brother, the oldest of five siblings, died. “He and Michael were very close. Dad set up a little memorial in the basement and would go down there all the time and just sit.” George Blass-

Family photo via The Washington Post

Nancy Andrews / Washington Post file

Jean Blassie, center, mother of Air Force 1st Lt. Michael Blassie, and his sister Patricia, right, now an Air Force colonel, talk with reporters at Arlington National Cemetery on May 14, 1998, after Michael Blassie’s remains were disinterred from the Tomb of the Unknowns.

Nancy Andrews / Washington Post file

The Vietnam Unknown’s coffin after its disinterment from Arlington National Cemetery, on May 14, 1998, when the remains of Air Force pilot Michael J. Blassie were removed and returned to his family in St. Louis.

ie, Michael’s father, died in 1991. Nearly six months after Blassie’s plane was shot down, a South Vietnamese army patrol located the crash site. A short distance away it made another discovery, reported in a radio log: “1 U.S. pilot’s body with ID Card, 1st LT BLASSIE, MICHAEL JOSEPH, and one Beacon radio and two compasses and one US flag and one parachute.” A rubber raft, portions of a holster and a flight suit were also found. The “body” consisted of six bone fragments. Among the personal belongings recovered was a wallet. Inside, a photograph of Blassie’s family. The American operations officer in An Loc, Army Capt. William Parnell, kept the remains with him that night. The next morning, the bones and other items were placed in a plastic bag and handed to a departing helicopter crew chief. On Nov. 2, 1972, they were turned over to the Saigon Mortuary, where Army Capt. Richard S. Hess signed off on the list of items received, including the wallet and Blassie’s ID. From South Vietnam, the bones — and a skeletal chart with the notation: “BTB [Believed to Be] Lt. Blassie, Michael Joseph” — were sent to a search and recovery center at Camp Samae San, Thailand, and then, in 1976, to Hawaii for analysis at the Army’s Central Identification Laboratory (CIL-HI). Missing from the items listed as received in Vietnam were the wallet and

ID, which had been lost or stolen between there and Hawaii. Tadao Furue, chief physical anthropologist at the Hawaii facility, began identifying Korean War casualties in 1951. In cases with little to go on, Furue, now deceased, would attempt to calculate age, height and other characteristics from bone fragments — a controversial technique he developed called “morphological approximation.” In a letter dated Dec. 4, 1978, Furue wrote that after “processing” the remains in the Blassie case, the age was estimated to be 26 to 33 years. “Blassie was 24 years 1 month 7 days at the time of his death and this is outside the estimated age bracket,” he wrote. The “living stature at the time of death” was estimated to be between 65.2 and 71.5 inches. Blassie’s height was 72 inches. It was also determined, by testing a single hair found in the portion of flight suit, that the “blood type of the remains disagrees with the recorded blood type ‘A’ for Blassie.” Furue recommended that the bones be reclassified and “designated unknown.” But the laboratory’s procedures, which frequently seemed like guesswork, according to Samuel Dunlap, employed at CIL-HI in the 1980s, were beginning to raise questions in the Defense Department and the scientific community.

Never notified Blassie’s family in St. Louis was never informed by the military that the wreckage of

his plane had been located or that remains were recovered, the same remains that were stored at the Army’s Central Identification Laboratory in a file labeled X-26. Better battlefield medical care, speedier evacuation of the wounded and a more thorough accounting of the dead meant that by the early 1980s, there were only four sets of unknown Vietnam-era remains. Two were subsequently identified; a third was considered to be non-American; and a fourth set — X-26 — was only 3 percent complete, far less than the customary 80 percent deemed suitable for burial in the Tomb of the Unknowns. “Some very powerful people” wanted a Vietnam Unknown buried in Arlington, says John Marsh, secretary of the Army at the time and now an adjunct professor of law at George Mason University. “The president wanted it done. Congress had authorized it. And we had the assurance of the person in charge that the remains in Hawaii were unknown.” Army Maj. Johnie Webb, a decorated Vietnam veteran, took charge of the Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii in 1982. He was familiar with the Blassie case. He also understood the signals Washington was sending. Webb says, Army headquarters in the Pentagon took steps to make sure the remains destined for Arlington would never be identified. On April 4, he says, he was ordered to remove from the X-26 file any information connecting Blassie to the Vietnam Unknown. It was at this point, in what he describes as “the struggle of my life,” that Webb decided to stop following orders. He began writing memos for his personal file, and instead of destroying the crash-site items — some of which, such as the life raft, could be tied directly to Blassie — he hid them in the one place no one would ever look. “I’m a Vietnam vet,” Webb says. “I had to do what was right. I put the evidence in the casket …with X-26.”

May 28, 1984 “Today, we pause to embrace him and all who served so well in a war whose end offered no parades, no flags, and so little thanks,” said President Ronald Reagan at the burial ceremony.

Air Force 1st Lt. Michael J. Blassie and a T-38 jet trainer. Blassie was killed in Vietnam on May 11, 1972, and his remains were interred at the Tomb of the Unknowns until 1998.

Then, placing the Medal of Honor on the flag-draped casket, the president said his final emotional farewell: “Thank you, dear son, and may God cradle you in his loving arms.” In 1994, Patricia Blassie was a captain in the Air Force and living in Marietta, Ga., when she received a phone call from Ted Sampley. The former Army Green Beret told her he had just written an article for the Vietnam veterans’ newsletter he published proving that her brother was buried in the Tomb of the Unknowns. “We wanted to know what happened to Michael,” Blassie says. “But finally finding out was a shock.” For Patricia Blassie, then

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working in the Air Force Office of Public Affairs in the Pentagon, the latest turn of events had serious implications. “I never wanted to embarrass the military or the country,” she says. “I just wanted to know the truth. We all did. And there was only one way to do that.” Jean, Michael’s mother, said: “For 26 years, we have been told that Michael was never found. Yet, he was found five months after he was shot down and then buried without our knowledge in the Tomb of the Unknowns. … I want to bring my son home.” Tests were performed at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The results showed a perfect match with DNA samples provided by Blassie’s family. The institute’s scientists also reported that, when the casket was opened, they found the crash-site artifacts that Central Identification Laboratory Commander Johnie Webb had put inside 14 years before. If political pressure led to a known soldier being buried in the Tomb of the Unknowns, it was her family’s determination that “helped us find Michael,” Blassie says. “We had the opportunity to rebury him in Arlington Cemetery, but we wanted to bring him home.” — Bill Thomas is an author and journalist in Washington.

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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

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Christian Murdock / Colorado Springs (Colo.) Gazette

Sarah Sankaouskas, left, secretary and curator, and Candice McKnight, president and CEO of the African-American Historical and Geneological Society of Colorado Springs, are researching the history and roots of local African-Americans. The two were pictured Sept. 12 in the society’s museum in the Westside Community Center at the old Buena Vista School in Old Colorado City.

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By Carol McGraw The (Colorado Springs, Colo.) Gazette

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Candice McKnight all but moves mountains to help people find their roots. But it was on an imposing rock set down in a stranger’s yard in Missouri that she looked her own family’s past in the face. The president of the AfricanAmerican Historical and Genealogical Society of Colorado Springs was visiting family when a cousin, who belonged to a historical society there, showed her the rock that had been a platform from which slaves were sold in the early 1800s. Intrigued, they found papers that showed that a great-great-grandmother had been sold there. But in an unusual twist, the woman was a French indentured servant who was sold to an African-American family. “That’s when I realized not all slaves were black and that blacks might be slaveholders,” McKnight said. McKnight stood on that rock in commemoration of her ancestor. At the women’s behest, the rock from which predominantly black slaves were sold became part of a display at the Franklin County Historical Society. “It’s surprises like that which makes genealogy so fascinating and important,” she says, adding it’s a good example of why no one should have set ideas when they delve into their history.

And it is why McKnight and her society members have relentlessly worked for decades to make sure history is preserved. For many black Americans, the legacy of slavery created a disconnect from their historical ancestral relations, notes Stephany Rose Spaulding, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs assistant professor of women’s and ethnic studies. “It was taken away from them. It was part of the breaking process to take their identity away,” she explains. The Transatlantic slave culture broke psychological ties to homeland and people. Slaves were separated from others of their culture or tribe so they were not among others who could speak their language. And their names were changed. The search for AfricanAmerican roots has particularly been difficult because the U.S. Census, which is the cornerstone of much genealogy, did not mention slaves in reports until 1870. “They were listed as property,” notes Spaulding. In recent times, AfricanAmericans have overcome research difficulties. The immense popularity of the book “Roots: The Saga of an American Family” in 1976 opened the door. Author Alex Haley painstakingly traced his line back to Kunta Kinte, who was kidnapped in Gambia in 1767 and sold into slavery in Maryland.

More recently, publicity about Sally Jennings, a Monticello plantation slave who is said to have bore children of President Thomas Jefferson, has renewed interest. This summer a group of genealogists issued a report that President Barack Obama likely is a descendent of slaves through his mother’s lineage. The possibility of filling in her family tree became reality for McKnight at a family reunion in 1999 when she wondered “how do all these people fit into my history?” Armed with some family names and dates, she ended up at the Penrose Library’s genealogy collection and the two Colorado Springs Family History Centers run by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, where she met several genealogists who would be her mentors. She encountered the challenges that come with the lack of the usual genealogical documentations such as birth and death certificates, not to mention the Census. “A lot of our history has just been thrown away,” McKnight says with an urgency that underscores her fear that even today’s family histories will disappear if no one preserves them. She convinces one workshop at a time, one person at a time, whatever it takes. “I tell everyone we have to keep this alive; if we don’t, who will? It’s a lot of work, but if you love it, it’s not hard,” she says.

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five games weekly at www.bendbridge.org.

Effort to preserve history drives the search for roots

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

Grammy Museum in charge of music history By Randy Lewis Los Angeles Times

Nam Y. Huh / The Associated Press file photo

On Tuesday in Chicago, President Barack Obama along with first lady Michelle Obama acknowledges the crowd at his election night party.

Michelle Obama picked Kors for election night By Samantha Critchell The Associated Press

NEW YORK — As Michelle Obama stepped on stage with her husband in Chicago early Wednesday morning, she accepted her role not only as first lady but fashion tastemaker for four more years — this time, wearing a Michael Kors magenta silk chine pin-tucked dress. As Mrs. Obama joined President Barack Obama, she sported a dress pulled in at the waist, and she topped it with a black shrug that showed a peek of a vintage pink brooch from House of Lavande. She was surrounded by her trendright daughters: Malia wore an electric-blue, A-line skirt with a pink studded belt that looks like the teen version of the first lady’s signature Azzedine Alaia belt, and Sasha had on an abstract-print green skirt, gray bow-front top and mimicked her mom’s shrunk-

en cardigan look. Mrs. Obama has been a reinvigorating force for the fashion industry, from her late-night online J. Crew purchases to her savvy courtship with up-andcoming designers, including Prabal Gurung and Jason Wu. Kors has been a consistent label in her wardrobe, with Mrs. Obama wearing a black, racerback dress by the designer in her official White House portrait, as well as a hot-pink gown for a White House Correspondents’ Dinner and a red halter gown at a Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Phoenix Awards dinner. “Mrs. Obama looked chic and elegant as always on election night,” Kors said in an email to the Associated Press. “My dress, with its strong color, clean lines and feminine silhouette, has all the elements that have become a part of the trademark style of our first lady.”

LOS ANGELES — Deep within the high-security Iron Mountain storage facility in Hollywood, where nearly every doorway except for the restroom is protected by a security-card swipe lock, sits the Grammy Museum’s permanent collection of pop music artifacts, recordings and memorabilia. Hundreds of 10-inch 78 rpm discs — some from Thomas Edison’s record label — reside in archival boxes on 20-foot-long metal shelves, near antique radios and phonograph players, musical instruments, posters and some celebrity fashion items stored out of sight in sturdy garment bags. Vintage synthesizers in their original cases take up a shelf right below three distinctively different accordions, an instrument Mark Twain famously dubbed “the stomach Steinway.” The Grammy Museum may have opened a little less than four years ago in downtown’s L.A. Live entertainment complex, but it’s already looking at myriad new ways to store and exhibit its extensive collection of music history. “People offer to donate things, but until we had someplace to properly store and preserve them, we’ve had to turn a lot of those offers down,” executive director Robert Santelli said last Friday during a walk-

Michael Robinson Chavez / Los Angeles Times

The Iron Mountain archival facility in Hollywood houses a massive collection of film and musical treasures including many items for the Grammy Museum.

through of the museum’s growing archive. “We have to be able to safely store the items, insure them — and be sure we can make them accessible to the public at some point, because we are an educational museum,” he said. “We’re working without an acquisition budget, so we have to rely on donations.” Grammy Museum assistant curator Ali Stuebner slipped on a pair of white cotton gloves to peek under the lid of a 4-foot-tall 1920svintage Edison phonograph resting against one of the storage space’s bunker-like concrete walls, and to show a visitor one of two old (but well cared for) piano accordions donated by squeeze-box virtuoso Ernie Felice. She

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later riffled through a couple of large boxes, each holding perhaps thousands of 5-by-7inch white notecards collected from one of Yoko Ono’s wishing trees, a project for which passersby were invited to complete the thought “Imagine a world …” in their own words and/or drawings. It’s gems like these that caused the museum to enter into a partnership with Iron Mountain about 18 months

ago, the company providing the storage space about six months later. The Grammy Museum’s spot in the massive building is modest: It’s a repository of about 900 air-conditioned square feet, compact compared with some of Iron Mountain’s 800 other entertainmentworld clients, whose holdings fill a 10,000-square-foot floor of the 14-story building. All the major record companies store master recordings made over the last 90 years here, said Jeff Anthony, Iron Mountain senior vice president of entertainment services. These recordings have increasingly become a part of revenue-generating plans as new music has become ever more challenging to break. Though movie studios, record companies, sports franchises and the USC School of Cinematic Arts also store items here, Anthony says the pairing with the Grammy Museum dovetails with his company’s mission to assist clients in digitizing their collections and, ultimately for those businesses in the private sector, making them profitable.

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S PO R T S

Scoreboard, D2 Golf, D2 College basketball, D3

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP VOLLEYBALL: CLASS 4A CHAMPIONSHIP

NBA

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Lakers look to bring back Jackson LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Lakers spoke to 11-time NBA champion coach Phil Jackson on Saturday about returning for a third stint on their bench. The Lakers confirmed on their website that Jackson discussed the job with owner Jim Buss and general manager Mitch Kupchak. They’ll meet again early next week. Los Angeles fired coach Mike Brown on Friday after a 1-4 start to a season of enormous expectations. Interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff led the Lakers to a blowout win over Golden State later that night, and the Lakers said Bickerstaff will coach the club in a home game against Sacramento tonight. Kobe Bryant and Dwight Howard have voiced their interest in playing for Jackson, and the legendary coach’s return to the 16-time champion franchise seems probable as long as Jackson decides he’s up to another stint in the prestigious job with a team that won five titles and reached seven NBA finals in his 11 seasons on its bench.

Ducks pull away late, beat Bears

Ivar Vong / For The Bulletin

Kayla Hamilton (left) leaps in the air during Crook County’s match with Astoria in the Class 4A volleyball championship in Eugene Saturday night. The Cowgirls beat Astoria 25-8, 25-18, 25-22.

Lucky No. 7 • Crook County sweeps Astoria to win its seventh straight state championship

— The Associated Press

Spurs beat Blazers San Antonio takes a 112-109 win over Portland, D3

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Pac-12 2 Oregon California

59 17

16 Stanford 13 Oregon State

27 23

17 UCLA Washington State

44 36

21 USC Arizona State

38 17

Washington Utah

34 15

Arizona Colorado

56 31

By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

EUGENE — Crook County was listed as the visitor for Saturday night’s Class 4A volleyball state final, but coach Rosie Honl and the Cowgirls were right at home. With a 25-8, 25-18, 25-22 sweep of Astoria at Lane Community College, Crook County clinched its third consecutive 4A state title and seventh straight state championship overall. “This was probably the youngest, most inexperienced team I have ever

had at the beginning of the season,” Honl said following the championship match. “They have grown so much. They have worked so hard to get better every day. It’s just a very mindful group.” Despite the inexperience, the familiarity of the state championship stage allowed the Cowgirls to easily take the first game from Astoria, by a score of 25-8. That comfort level, Honl said, is what allowed her team to start fast. After winning the second game,

29 24

3 Kansas State TCU

23 10

4 Notre Dame Boston College

21 6

5 Georgia Auburn

38 0

7 Florida La.-Lafayette

27 20

9 LSU 23 Mississippi State

37 17

10 Clemson Maryland

45 10

Syracuse 11 Louisville

45 26

12 South Carolina Arkansas

38 20

14 Oklahoma Baylor

42 34

18 Nebraska Penn State

32 23

19 Louisiana Tech Texas State

62 55

19 Texas Iowa State

33 7

24 Rutgers Army

28 7

25 Texas Tech Kansas

41 34

Crook County ran into a bit of a snag in the third game, falling behind 1410 before Honl called a timeout. “Your muscles don’t work properly when they’re tight,” Honl said. “They were just getting tight and anxious. I just said, ‘Relax. Play the game like you should. Go back to fundamentals, and just pass the ball. Everything else will come.’ ” The Cowgirls responded with a rally and took the final three points of the game to seal the state title. See Crook County / D5

Jose Sanchez / The Associated Press

Culver claims 2nd state title • The Bulldogs need five games before dethroning Days Creek in the championship in Redmond By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

No. 1 Alabama falls to Texas A&M The Crimson Tide suffer their first loss of the season • Roundups, D3, D6 • Scoreboard, D3

The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. — Marcus Mariota overcame a brief injury to throw for a career-high 377 yards and tie a school record with six touchdown passes as No. 2 Oregon made a case for the top ranking in the country by beating California 59-17 on Saturday night. The Ducks (10-0, 7-0 Pac-12) withstood injuries to its entire starting defensive line and brief absences by Mariota and star running back Kenjon Barner to extend the longest active winning streak in major college football to 13 games. The win over California (3-8, 2-6) could be enough to move Oregon up to No. 1 after top-ranked Alabama lost earlier in the day 29-23 to No. 15 Texas A&M. Even more importantly, the Crimson Tide loss cleared one potential rival for a spot in the BCS title game, leaving Notre Dame and Kansas State as the only other major undefeated teams eligible for a bowl. The Ducks are currently third in the BCS rankings. After struggling for more than a half against a Golden Bears team that was missing quarterback Zach Maynard and star receiver Keenan Allen, the Ducks will have to be more consistent the next few weeks if they want to remain unbeaten. They finish the regular season against No. 16 Stanford and No. 13 Oregon State and also could be in the Pac-12 title game. See Ducks / D5

PREP VOLLEYBALL: CLASS 2A CHAMPIONSHIP

Top 25 15 Texas A&M 1 Alabama

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NBA, D3 College football, D3, D6 Prep sports, D4-D5

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Culver’s Shealene Little (7) spikes the ball past three Days Creek defenders at the net during the first game in the two teams’ Class 2A state championship match on Saturday night at Ridgeview High School in Redmond.

REDMOND — Bulldog Nation went berserk for this one. Playing less than 30 minutes from home in front of what seemed like their entire hometown, Culver High rallied to knock off Days Creek in five games Saturday night to win the Class 2A state volleyball championship. Shealene Little produced 16 kills, Gabrielle Alley added 10 kills and 13 digs, and Jahnie Cleveland dished out 24 assists as the Bulldogs dethroned 2011 state champion Days Creek at Ridgeview High, 13-25, 25-22, 16-25, 25-22, 15-11. “As soon as it went to the fifth game, I knew we had it,” beamed Culver coach Randi Viggiano. “These girls believe, believe, believe!” See Culver / D5

Cougars rally for 3-2 playoff victory By Amanda Miles

PREP BOYS SOCCER: CLASS 5A STATE PLAYOFFS

The Bulletin

Momentum can be a funny thing, especially in soccer. Trailing Crescent Valley 2-0 in a Class 5A boys quarterfinal match on Saturday, Mountain View had little going for it and seemed headed for defeat on its home field. But midway through the second half, the Cougars generated momentum at the most opportune of times — when the end of their season was staring them directly in the face — by scoring two goals in rapid succession before eventually getting the game-winner from Zach Emerson in overtime to cap a dramatic 3-2 come-from-behind victory. With the win, the Cougars advance to the semifinals and are scheduled to play crosstown rival Summit on Tuesday night with a

berth in the 5A final on the line. “A brilliant run from Wyatt Lay through the midfield unmarked. And that finish, that sparked it,” Mountain View coach Chris Rogers said about his team’s first goal against Crescent Valley (9-3-3), a No. 3 playoff seed and the thirdplace team out of the Mid-Willamette Conference. “That was where I think everybody was like, ‘OK, we believe.’” On that first Mountain View goal Lay, a senior, came charging out of the midfield to beat the Raiders defense to a perfectly placed through ball by Zel Rey. Crescent Valley goalkeeper Taylor Doolen was able to get a touch on Lay’s driven shot, but the ball had plenty of momen-

tum to carry past the goal line. “Once we got that first goal, I thought that we could get back in the game,” said Emerson, a freshman. “We started playing how we can play. We played with heart.” The second-seeded Cougars (104-2), who stretched their unbeaten streak to eight games with the victory, did not wait long to equalize. Just a few minutes later, Rey drove a corner kick from the right side into the penalty area. Rene Razo, a defender who had ventured forward to take advantage of the set-piece opportunity, was there to meet the ball and sent a one-timer into the back of the net from about 7 yards out. See Cougars / D4

Oregon running back De’Anthony Thomas, left, is brought down by California linebacker Nick Forbes (11) during the second half of Saturday night’s game in Berkeley, Calif.

Oregon State suffers tough loss to Stanford By Antonio Gonzalez The Associated Press

STANFORD, Calif. — Stanford coach David Shaw fought back tears. Running back Stepfan Taylor’s voice trembled. Linebacker Alex Debniak’s eye black smeared all over his face. In the home locker room at Stanford Stadium late Saturday afternoon, these were not the looks of the losers. Instead, they were the emotions from surviving Senior Day and the possibility of an intriguing opportunity ahead: a chance to host one more game this season. And they can thank a redshirt freshman and a fortunate fumble for the chance. Kevin Hogan threw for 254 yards and three touchdowns in his first collegiate start, and No. 16 Stanford overcame four turnovers to rally past No. 13 Oregon State 27-23 on Saturday and stay in control of its Pac-12 title hopes. See Oregon State / D6

Jeff Chiu / The Associated Press

Stanford tight end Zach Ertz (86) catches a pass in front of Oregon State safety Ryan Murphy (25) during the third quarter of Saturday’s game in Stanford, Calif. Stanford won 27-23.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

O A

SCOREBOARD

TELEVISION Today BASKETBALL 3 a.m.: Men’s college, Eastern Washington at Washington State (same-day tape), Pac-12 Network. 3 p.m.: Men’s college, Charleston Southern at Arizona, Pac-12 Network. 5 p.m.: Men’s college, Loyola (Md.) at Washington, Pac-12 Network. 6 p.m.: Men’s college, Montana State at Seattle, Root Sports. 7 p.m.: Men’s college, Cal State Bakersfield at California, Pac-12 Network. TENNIS 6 a.m.: ATP Tour, Barclays World Tour Finals, first semifinal, ESPN2. 11:30 a.m.: ATP Tour, Barclays World Tour Finals, second semifinal, ESPN2. FOOTBALL 10 a.m.: NFL, New York Giants at Cincinnati Bengals, Fox. 1 p.m.: NFL, New York Jets at Seattle Seahawks, CBS. 1 p.m.: NFL, St. Louis Rams at San Francisco 49ers, Fox. 1:30 p.m.: CFL playoffs, second semifinal, Saskatchewan Roughriders at Calgary Stampeders, NBC Sports Network. 5:20 p.m.: NFL, Houston Texans at Chicago Bears, NBC. 8 p.m.: CFL playoffs, semifinal, Edmonton Eskimos at Toronto Argonauts (same-day tape), NBC Sports Network. MOTOR SPORTS Noon: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AdvoCare 500, ESPN. 4 p.m.: NHRA, Automobile Club of Southern California Finals (same-day tape), ESPN2. FIGURE SKATING 1 p.m.: ISU Grand Prix: Cup of Russia (taped), NBC.

SOCCER 6 p.m.: MLS playoffs, Los Angeles vs. Seattle, ESPN.

Monday TENNIS Noon: ATP, Barclays World Tour Finals, ESPN2. SOCCER 2 p.m.: English Premier League, Manchester City FC vs. Tottenham Hotspur FC (taped), Root Sports. FOOTBALL 5:30 p.m.: NFL, Kansas City Chiefs at Pittsburgh Steelers, ESPN. BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m.: Men’s college, Portland State at Oregon, Pac-12 Network. 7 p.m.: NBA, Atlanta Hawks at Portland Trail Blazers, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 8:30 p.m.: Men’s college, Cal State Fullerton at Stanford, Pac12 Network. 9 p.m.: Men’s college, West Virginia at Gonzaga, ESPN. 11 p.m.: Men’s college, Davidson at New Mexico, ESPN.

RADIO Today BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m.: Men’s college, New Mexico State at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM 690.

Monday BASKETBALL 7 p.m.: NBA, Atlanta Hawks at Portland Trail Blazers, KBND-AM 1110. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations

S B Tennis • Del Potro beats Federer to reach semis in London: Juan Martin del Potro is getting the better of Roger Federer again, in a way that no player had managed in a decade. Using his hard serve and booming forehand, Del Potro earned the last spot in the semifinals of the ATP finals Saturday in London by overcoming the already-qualified Federer 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-3 in their last round-robin match. Del Potro will face Novak Djokovic in the semifinals Sunday, before Federer takes on Andy Murray.

Motor sports • Capps tops NHRA Funny Car qualifying: Ron Capps rallied to top Funny Car qualifying Saturday in Pomona, Calif., in the season-ending Auto Club NHRA Finals with a run of 4.007 seconds at 319.29 mph. Capps had the big fourth-round run after failing to qualify Thursday and Friday and ending up 15th in the 16-car field after the third round Saturday morning. Capps trails points leader Jack Beckman by two points, and must win one more round than Beckman in the final eliminations to take the season title. • Logano wins as Sadler wrecks to hurt Nationwide title chances: Joey Logano picked up his ninth Nationwide Series win of the season in Avondale, Ariz., and a wreck by Elliott Sadler helped Ricky Stenhouse Jr. move a big step closer toward a second championship. Logano was dominant Saturday at Phoenix, but was under pressure late from Brian Vickers and Stenhouse. But as they closed in on the white flag for what should have been the final lap, Sadler imploded. The championship contender was running 12th and racing hard — too hard — with Justin Allgaier and Cole Whitt when he triggered a three-car accident. Stenhouse can clinch the title by finishing 16th or better in the finale.

Football • Wilson says he has quit Washington State team: Star receiver Marquess Wilson says he has quit the Washington State football team, and blamed the coaching staff for what he called abuse of players. Wilson was suspended this week for an unspecified violation of team rules. He said in a press release Saturday that he has left the program because of the actions of

first-year coach Mike Leach and his staff. Wilson said the new staff has “preferred to belittle, intimidate and humiliate us.” Team spokesman Bill Stevens could not confirm that Wilson, the team’s career receptions leader, has left. Stevens said Wilson remains suspended.

Hockey • NHL, union meet for small, informal lunch: Representatives on both sides of the NHL labor fight are meeting in an informal lunch setting, one day after negotiations hit a sour patch. The sides were in contact Saturday before a small group got together, a players’ association spokesman says in an email. It hasn’t been determined if further bargaining will take place on the 56th day of the lockout that has delayed and shortened the hockey season. Negotiations have taken place the previous four days. Talks broke off Friday night a few hours into a bargaining session on the core economic differences that separate the sides.

Skiing • Hoefl-Riesch wins WCup slalom; Shiffrin of U.S. 3rd: Olympic champion Maria HoeflRiesch of Germany overcame a hip injury Saturday to win the season’s first World Cup slalom, with 17-year-old American Mikaela Shiffrin in third place. In a race 80 miles north of the Arctic Circle, the northernmost venue on the circuit, Hoefl-Riesch skied an excellent second run to overtake Finland’s Tanja Poutiainen, who finished second. Defending overall World Cup champion Lindsey Vonn skipped the slalom to prepare for races in Aspen, Colo. Hoefl-Riesch trailed Poutiainen after the first run but had the fastest time in the second for a total time of 1 minute, 55.58 seconds.

Boxing • Klitschko retains world heavyweight belts: Wladimir Klitschko retained his WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweight titles, unanimously outpointing Poland’s Mariusz Wach on Saturday night. The 6-foot-7 1⁄2 Wach was the tallest opponent Klitschko has faced in his 16year professional career, but offered little threat against the faster Ukrainian. The judges scored it 120-107, 120-107 and 119-109 for Klitschko. — From wire reports

ON DECK Tuesday Girls soccer: Class 5A semifinals, Summit at Corvallis, TBA Boys soccer: Class 5A semifinals, Mountain View at Summit, TBA Friday Football: Class 5A state playoffs: Crescent Valley at Redmond, 7 p.m.; Mountain View vs. Marist at Willamette High in Eugene, 7 p.m. Saturday Boys soccer: Class 5A state final in Hillsboro, TBA Girls soccer: Class 5A state final iln Hillsboro, TBA

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PST ——— AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 5 3 0 .625 262 170 Miami 4 4 0 .500 170 149 N.Y. Jets 3 5 0 .375 168 200 Buffalo 3 5 0 .375 180 248 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 7 1 0 .875 237 137 Indianapolis 6 3 0 .667 186 201 Tennessee 3 6 0 .333 182 308 Jacksonville 1 8 0 .111 127 246 North W L T Pct PF PA Baltimore 6 2 0 .750 199 176 Pittsburgh 5 3 0 .625 191 164 Cincinnati 3 5 0 .375 189 218 Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 169 211 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 5 3 0 .625 235 175 San Diego 4 4 0 .500 185 157 Oakland 3 5 0 .375 171 229 Kansas City 1 7 0 .125 133 240 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y. Giants 6 3 0 .667 254 185 Philadelphia 3 5 0 .375 133 183 Dallas 3 5 0 .375 150 181 Washington 3 6 0 .333 226 248 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 8 0 0 1.000 220 143 Tampa Bay 4 4 0 .500 226 185 New Orleans 3 5 0 .375 218 229 Carolina 2 6 0 .250 149 180 North W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 7 1 0 .875 236 120 Green Bay 6 3 0 .667 239 187 Minnesota 5 4 0 .556 204 197 Detroit 4 4 0 .500 192 188 West W L T Pct PF PA San Francisco 6 2 0 .750 189 103 Seattle 5 4 0 .556 170 154 Arizona 4 5 0 .444 144 173 St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 137 186 ——— Thursday’s Game Indianapolis 27, Jacksonville 10 Today’s Games Atlanta at New Orleans, 10 a.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Denver at Carolina, 10 a.m. San Diego at Tampa Bay, 10 a.m. Tennessee at Miami, 10 a.m. Buffalo at New England, 10 a.m. Oakland at Baltimore, 10 a.m. N.Y. Giants at Cincinnati, 10 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Seattle, 1:05 p.m. St. Louis at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 1:25 p.m. Houston at Chicago, 5:20 p.m. Open: Arizona, Cleveland, Green Bay, Washington Monday’s Game Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 5:30 p.m.

Betting line NFL (Home teams in Caps) Favorite Open Current Underdog Today PATRIOTS 12 13 Bills Giants 4.5 4 BENGALS BUCS 3 3 Chargers Broncos 4.5 4 PANTHERS DOLPHINS 6 6 Titans RAVENS 7 7.5 Raiders Falcons 2.5 2.5 SAINTS Lions 1 2.5 VIKINGS SEAHAWKS 6.5 6 Jets Cowboys PK 2 EAGLES 49ERS 12 12.5 Rams BEARS 1.5 1 Texans Monday STEELERS 12.5 12.5 Chiefs

BASKETBALL Men’s college Saturday’s Results EAST Cornell 63, W. Michigan 55 Dartmouth 67, Maine 54 Fairfield 64, CCSU 63, OT La Salle 73, Delaware 66 New Hampshire 91, Suffolk 51 Princeton 57, Buffalo 53 Providence 64, NJIT 63 Quinnipiac 65, Hartford 61 Sacred Heart 85, Yale 82, OT Youngstown St. 80, George Washington 73 SOUTH Columbia 68, Furman 47 Delaware St. 74, Gwynedd-Mercy 56 East Carolina 72, Washington & Lee 50 Gardner-Webb 77, Covenant 39 Lincoln (Pa.) 68, Howard 62 Mercer 65, Sewanee 36 North Florida 79, Edward Waters 65 Old Dominion 72, Morgan St. 61

Southern Miss. 67, W. Kentucky 64, OT Tennessee Tech 107, Crowley’s Ridge 32 UAB 105, Young Harris 59 UCF 74, South Florida 56 UTSA 60, Holy Cross 56 Vanderbilt 80, Nicholls St. 65 Virginia Tech 80, ETSU 62 Winthrop 80, St. Andrews 48 MIDWEST Butler 74, Elon 59 Dayton 74, Arkansas St. 61 Drake 96, William Jewell 66 Green Bay 72, Chicago St. 67 Missouri 83, SIU-Edwardsville 69 N. Iowa 103, Wartburg 50 Notre Dame 58, Evansville 49 Ohio 81, Portland 52 Wichita St. 71, NC Central 57 SOUTHWEST St. Thomas (Texas) 72, Rice 59 Texas A&M-CC 60, Texas Lutheran 49 FAR WEST Arizona St. 79, Cent. Arkansas 64 Long Beach St. 75, North Alabama 65 N. Colorado 127, Southwest 81 Oregon 83, N. Arizona 73 Pacific 76, Holy Names 38 Saint Mary’s (Cal) 95, Sonoma St. 69 Santa Clara 106, Simpson (Cal.) 66 UC Irvine 78, Nevada 64 Utah St. 56, Idaho St. 48 Washington St. 88, E. Washington 69 Wyoming 62, Western St. (Col.) 42 TOURNAMENT All-Military Classic First Round Air Force 76, Army 65 The Citadel 84, VMI 76 Saturday’s Summary

Oregon 83, N. Arizona 73 N. ARIZONA (0-1) Dunn 4-13 2-4 13, Rogers 3-13 0-0 8, Bewernick 3-5 1-2 7, Saldivar 3-7 1-2 8, Ekanem 2-5 0-0 4, Hamilton 1-4 1-2 4, Russell 6-12 0-0 15, Flores 0-1 0-0 0, Jacobsen 5-8 0-0 10, Martin 2-2 0-0 4, Wahl 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-70 5-10 73. OREGON (1-0) Singler 4-11 3-6 12, Woods 6-10 2-3 14, Artis 5-10 0-0 10, Dotson 5-8 1-2 13, Moore 2-4 3-4 7, Richardson III 1-2 0-0 3, Loyd 0-1 4-5 4, Austin 3-6 0-0 6, Carter 0-0 4-4 4, Emory 1-5 5-8 8, Kuemper 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 28-58 22-32 83. Halftime—Oregon 45-35. 3-Point Goals—N. Arizona 10-29 (Russell 3-5, Dunn 3-9, Rogers 2-9, Hamilton 1-1, Saldivar 1-3, Flores 0-1, Bewernick 0-1), Oregon 5-15 (Dotson 2-3, Richardson III 1-1, Emory 1-3, Singler 1-4, Loyd 0-1, Moore 0-1, Artis 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—N. Arizona 36 (Saldivar 7), Oregon 43 (Singler 8). Assists—N. Arizona 16 (Rogers, Saldivar 4), Oregon 12 (Artis, Singler 3). Total Fouls—N. Arizona 24, Oregon 11. A—5,768.

Women’s college Saturday’s Results EAST American International 85, Felician 33 Brown 82, St. Peter’s 48 Dartmouth 64, Bryant 53 Dominican (NY) 63, New Haven 59 LIU Post 82, Adelphi 81 S. Connecticut 70, Dowling 68 St. Anselm 55, Nyack 40 St. Bonaventure 61, Binghamton 34 St. Michael’s 89, Molloy 48 St. Rose 57, Concordia (NY) 52 Towson 63, Manhattan 60, OT UMass 83, Kent St. 53 SOUTH Asbury 83, Kentucky Christian 73 Bethel (Tenn.) 83, Mobile 71 Brenau 66, Martin Methodist 64 Bridgeport 73, Wilmington (Del.) 58 Carson-Newman 85, Erskine 45 Charleston Southern 60, UNC-Greensboro 57 Charlotte 80, NC Central 31 Coker 61, Lincoln Memorial 59 Cumberland (Tenn.) 64, Spring Hill 63, OT Florida Gulf Coast 100, Warner 31 Georgetown (Ky.) 83, Trevecca Nazarene 73 High Point 85, ETSU 76 Kentucky 90, Delaware St. 50 Lee 56, Evangel 53 Milligan 97, Berea 80 Nicholls St. 60, MVSU 57 Pfeiffer 85, Anderson (SC) 77, 2OT Shawnee St. 86, Mid-Continent 42 South Florida 70, Stetson 48 St. Thomas (Fla.) 85, Loyola NO 80 Tennessee Tech 86, Tenn. Wesleyan 47 Texas 72, Hofstra 52 Vanderbilt 82, McNeese St. 71 W. Carolina 58, UNC Asheville 45 MIDWEST Akron 83, Hiram 24 Augustana (SD) 95, Mount Marty 56 Benedictine (Kan.) 67, Park 63 Bowling Green 68, Madonna 57 Davenport 76, N. Michigan 67 Dayton 92, DePaul 80 Green Bay 54, N. Iowa 53 Huntington 72, Campbellsville 66 IUPUI 107, Grace 48 Indianapolis 79, Lake Superior St. 48 Lewis 70, Saginaw Valley St. 60 Marquette 73, Butler 62 Michigan Tech 90, Concordia (St.P) 80 Northwestern (Iowa) 82, Viterbo 36 Oklahoma 69, Creighton 48 Purdue 82, SC-Upstate 47 Rochester (Mich.) 56, Aquinas 54 Sioux Falls 76, Nebraska Wesleyan 42 St. Francis (Ind.) 84, Concordia (Mich.) 80 St. Mary’s (Minn.) 74, Winona St. 68 Upper Iowa 82, William Jewell 77 W. Michigan 57, American U. 53 Wis.-Parkside 85, Eureka 50 Xavier 71, Bucknell 62 SOUTHWEST SMU 76, Alcorn St. 46 UTEP 79, Loyola Marymount 51 Wiley 72, Dillard 44 FAR WEST Oregon St. 71, W. Washington 59 S. Utah 99, S. Oregon 71 San Diego 69, CS San Marcos 44 UCLA 66, San Diego St. 52 Utah 75, Denver 60

TOURNAMENT Best Buy Classic First Round Minnesota 87, Washington St. 83, 2OT Villanova 71, S. Dakota St. 47 Sheraton Raleigh Wolfpack Invitation Championship NC State 85, Auburn 71 Third Place Wofford 79, Maine 76, OT United Electric Tip-Off Classic Championship Cedarville 67, Bellarmine 56 Third Place Ferris St. 62, Kentucky St. 58 EXHIBITION Freed-Hardeman 64, Concordia-Selma 43

GOLF PGA Tour Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Saturday At Lake Buena Vista, Fla. m-Magnolia Golf Course: 7,516 yards, par-72 p-Palm Golf Course: 7,011 yards, par-72 Purse: $4.7 million Third Round Charlie Beljan 68m-64p-71m—203 Brian Gay 69p-69m-67m—205 Josh Teater 71p-67m-67m—205 Charlie Wi 64p-71m-70m—205 Vaughn Taylor 70m-68p-68m—206 Robert Garrigus 68p-68m-70m—206 Camilo Villegas 65p-71m-70m—206 Matt Every 67p-69m-70m—206 Tommy Gainey 65p-71m-70m—206 Daniel Chopra 69m-67p-70m—206 Henrik Stenson 68m-67p-71m—206 Ryan Palmer 70m-70p-67m—207 Cameron Beckman 70m-68p-69m—207 Brendon de Jonge 69m-68p-70m—207 Scott Stallings 66p-70m-71m—207 Scott Dunlap 72m-68p-68m—208 Tim Herron 71m-70p-67m—208 Sean O’Hair 73m-68p-67m—208 Tom Gillis 72m-66p-70m—208 Kevin Chappell 67p-69m-72m—208 Kevin Streelman 68m-68p-72m—208 Matt Jones 71m-64p-73m—208 Charles Howell III 68m-67p-73m—208 Ryuji Imada 69p-66m-73m—208 Harris English 68p-67m-73m—208 Jonas Blixt 70p-71m-68m—209 D.J. Trahan 74m-67p-68m—209 Colt Knost 67p-71m-71m—209 Roland Thatcher 69p-73m-67m—209 Boo Weekley 70m-67p-72m—209 Mark Anderson 68p-67m-74m—209 Will Claxton 72m-67p-71m—210 Ken Duke 67p-74m-69m—210 Russell Knox 66p-72m-72m—210 Derek Lamely 73m-68p-69m—210 Jeff Maggert 72p-70m-68m—210 Daniel Summerhays 71m-71p-68m—210 Miguel Angel Carballo 71m-65p-74m—210 Jerry Kelly 71m-68p-72m—211 Joey Snyder III 69m-70p-72m—211 Davis Love III 73p-68m-70m—211 Brian Harman 66p-72m-73m—211 Stuart Appleby 74m-68p-69m—211 William McGirt 71m-71p-69m—211 Roberto Castro 69p-71m-72m—212 Matt Bettencourt 67p-74m-71m—212 J.J. Killeen 71p-70m-71m—212 Martin Flores 72p-69m-71m—212 Billy Horschel 71p-70m-71m—212 Gavin Coles 71m-71p-70m—212 Garrett Willis 73m-69p-70m—212 Ted Potter, Jr. 75m-68p-69m—212 Alex Cejka 72p-71m-69m—212 Robert Karlsson 71m-70p-72m—213 Jason Kokrak 71m-68p-74m—213 Justin Leonard 73m-67p-73m—213 Stewart Cink 69p-69m-75m—213 Chris Stroud 70m-66p-77m—213 Jason Bohn 73m-70p-70m—213 Kyle Reifers 69m-74p-70m—213 Marco Dawson 68p-72m-74m—214 Ben Curtis 69m-70p-75m—214 Patrick Sheehan 69p-73m-72m—214 Brendan Steele 67p-75m-72m—214 Cameron Tringale 75m-67p-72m—214 Nathan Green 71p-72m-71m—214 Chris DiMarco 72p-71m-71m—214 John Rollins 70m-70p-75m—215 Shane Bertsch 69p-71m-75m—215 Carl Paulson 71m-70p-74m—215 Gary Woodland 73p-68m-74m—215 Tom Pernice Jr. 74p-68m-73m—215 Nick O’Hern 69m-73p-73m—215 Mathew Goggin 69p-74m-72m—215 Chris Kirk 73p-70m-72m—215 Edward Loar 69m-74p-72m—215 Alexandre Rocha 71p-70m-75m—216 Chez Reavie 68m-74p-74m—216

LPGA Tour Lorena Ochoa Invitational Saturday At Guadalajara Country Club Guadalajara, Mexico Purse: $1 million Yardage: 6,626; Par: 72 Third Round Inbee Park 67-68-66—201 Cristie Kerr 67-69-67—203 So Yeon Ryu 67-70-67—204 Angela Stanford 66-67-72—205 Karine Icher 67-71-69—207 Michelle Wie 66-75-67—208 Hee Kyung Seo 70-69-69—208 Candie Kung 66-71-71—208 Stacy Lewis 67-70-71—208 Katherine Hull 68-71-70—209 I.K. Kim 68-70-71—209 Brittany Lincicome 71-73-66—210 Haeji Kang 74-68-68—210 Anna Nordqvist 69-71-70—210 Catriona Matthew 71-72-68—211 Jessica Korda 75-69-68—212 Azahara Munoz 71-73-68—212 Suzann Pettersen 70-74-68—212 Brittany Lang 73-71-69—213 Lorena Ochoa 71-72-70—213 Beatriz Recari 69-73-71—213 Ai Miyazato 73-68-72—213 Paula Creamer 71-76-67—214 Vicky Hurst 71-70-73—214 Natalie Gulbis 71-72-72—215

Sandra Gal Yani Tseng Giulia Sergas Lexi Thompson Julieta Granada Kristy McPherson Meena Lee Eun-Hee Ji Chella Choi Alejandra Llaneza Tanya Dergal

73-69-73—215 70-71-76—217 76-73-69—218 71-77-70—218 77-70-71—218 71-74-74—219 75-73-73—221 73-74-74—221 76-74-72—222 72-77-77—226 77-76-74—227

TENNIS Professional ATP World Tour Finals Saturday At The O2 Arena London Purse: $8.11 million (Tour Final) Surface: Hard-Indoor Round Robin Singles Group B x-advanced to semifinals Juan Martin del Potro (6), Argentina, def. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-3. David Ferrer (4), Spain, def. Janko Tipsarevic (8), Serbia, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. Group B Standings: x-Federer 2-1 (sets 5-2), xdel Potro 2-1 (5-3), Ferrer 2-1 (4-4), Tipsarevic 0-3 (1-6). Group A Standings: x-Djokovic 3-0 (6-1), x-Murray 2-1 (5-3), Berdych 1-2 (3-5), Tsonga 0-3 (1-6).

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint CupAdvoCare 500 Lineup After Friday qualifying; race today At Phoenix International Raceway Avondale, Ariz. Lap length: 1 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 138.766 mph. 2. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 138.217. 3. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 137.578. 4. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 137.478. 5. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 137.211. 6. (78) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 137.007. 7. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 136.992. 8. (51) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 136.872. 9. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 136.867. 10. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 136.867. 11. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 136.83. 12. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 136.721. 13. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 136.679. 14. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 136.622. 15. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 136.488. 16. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 136.436. 17. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 136.358. 18. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 136.353. 19. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 136.271. 20. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 136.219. 21. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 136.003. 22. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 135.905. 23. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 135.547. 24. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 135.44. 25. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 135.211. 26. (22) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 135.171. 27. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 134.948. 28. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 134.948. 29. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 134.933. 30. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 134.449. 31. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 134.373. 32. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 134.343. 33. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 134.198. 34. (44) David Reutimann, Ford, 134.008. 35. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 133.62. 36. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 133.576. 37. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 132.954. 38. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 132.817. 39. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 132.387. 40. (91) Jason Leffler, Chevrolet, 131.329. 41. (32) Timmy Hill, Ford, 129.945. 42. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 43. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 130.067. Failed to Qualify 44. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 127.056.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PST ——— EASTERN CONFERENCE Championship Today, Nov. 11: Houston vs. D.C. United, 1 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18: D.C. United vs. Houston, 1 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Championship Today, Nov. 11: Los Angeles vs. Seattle, 6 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18: Seattle vs. Los Angeles, 6 p.m. MLS CUP Saturday, Dec. 1: Eastern champion vs. Western champion, 4:30 p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL National League WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Announced manager Davey Johnson will return next season and become a consultant in 2014. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association HOUSTON ROCKETS — Announced coach Kevin McHale is taking a leave absence. Named assistant coach Kelvin Sampson interim coach. FOOTBALL National Football League NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Activated TE Visanthe Shiancoe from injured reserve. NEW YORK GIANTS — Activated S Will Hill from the suspended list. Placed CB Michael Coe on injured reserve. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Activated CB Ron Bartell from injured reserve. Signed RB Jeremy Stewart from the practice squad. Released CB Pat Lee. Placed CB Shawntae Spencer on injured reserve. GOLF PGA OF AMERICA — Named Pete Bevacqua chief exective officer. Elected Ted Bishop president and Derek Sprague vice president.

Beljan out of hospital, but maintains PGA Tour lead Th e Associated Press LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Doctors told Charlie Beljan he was in good enough health to leave the hospital Saturday morning, but perhaps not to play golf. With his job on the line and his name atop the leaderboard for the first time, Beljan ignored the recommendation and was glad he did. One day after a panic attack so severe that he struggled to breathe and feared for his life, Beljan managed just fine in the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Classic. Despite a pair of early bogeys, and one nervous moment when he felt his chest tighten, he had a 1under 71 that gave him a twoshot lead going into the final round at Disney. Suddenly, the 28-year-old rookie has a chance to do more than just keep his card. He’s one round away from winning on the PGA Tour. “I honestly didn’t think I was going to get through it,” Beljan

GOLF ROUNDUP said. “I just stayed strong.” He stayed overnight in the hospital — with his shoes on for most of the night — and only got about an hour of sleep. This is the final PGA Tour event of the year, and Beljan is at No. 139 on the money list. Only the top 125 keep their cards, and Beljan likely would need to finish around 10th. Beljan said he started to feel some of the same symptoms from Friday as he approached the turn. He ate a sandwich, tried to calm himself, and back-to-back birdies to start the back nine certainly helped. He closed with six straight pars to reach 13-under 203. That gave him a two-shot lead over Brian Gay (67), Josh Teater (67) and Charlie Wi, who was tied with Beljan until two sloppy bogeys at the end for a 70. “It’s nice to be able to walk

Reinhold Matay / The Associated Press

Charlie Beljan hits his tee shot on the ninth hole during the third round of the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals Classic in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., on Saturday.

around and smile,” Beljan said. “Yesterday, I was hanging on for my life.” When last seen at Disney, Beljan was gasping to draw a big breath and sitting in the fairway to wait his turn to

hit. Paramedics followed him around the back nine after a spike in his blood pressure. After signing for a 64, Beljan emerged from the scoring room strapped into a stretcher and was loaded into an ambulance. Also on Saturday: Park on top after 66 GUADALAJARA, Mexico — Inbee Park moved into position for her third victory of the year, shooting a 6-under 66 to take a two-stroke lead into the final round of the Lorena Ochoa Invitational. Cristie Kerr was second after a 67. Bjorn up one in Singapore SINGAPORE — Denmark’s Thomas Bjorn had a onestroke lead over England’s Chris Wood when third-round play in the rain-soaked Singapore Open was suspended because of darkness. Top-ranked Rory McIlroy was 4 under with nine holes left, and Phil Mickelson was 1 under with 14 holes remaining.


SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

Ducks start season with win over N. Arizona The Associated Press EUGENE — Tony Woods scored 14 points, including an emphatic two-handed dunk late in the game to put Oregon up for good in an 83-73 victory against Northern Arizona on Saturday night in the season opener for both teams. Freshman Damyean Dotson also scored 13 points for the Ducks, E.J. Singler added 12 points and eight rebounds, and Dominic Artis had 10, which sealed the win with a game-ending 17-6 run. The Ducks, who returned only four scholarship players with game experience, started three freshmen against the Lumberjacks and played six, but it was the veterans who ignited the rally. Oregon trailed 67-66 with 5:43 to play following back-to-back 3-pointers by NAU’s Dewayne Russell and Blake Hamilton. But Woods, a senior center, put the Ducks back on top when he spun through the lane and thundered home a dunk for a 68-67 advantage. Singler, a senior forward, followed with a rebound basket and senior forward Carlos Emory drained a 3pointer as the Ducks took off on a 13-0 run that ended with a 79-67 lead with :36.8 seconds left. “Fortunately, we were able to put together some boards, get some stops and execute our offense and put together a run,” Woods said. The Lumberjacks missed eight straight shots during Oregon’s run. “We had so many combinations (of players) during the game and a lot of them did not work,” Oregon coach Dana Altman said. “When it got closer I just decided to go with the four guys that had experience, that got us back in the lead and a little bit of control.” The Lumberjacks gave the Ducks a game for much of the first half, and a 3pointer by Michael Dunn made it 30-30 with 6:21 to play. Oregon responded with its best stretch of the half, outscoring NAU 15-2 over the next four minutes to take a 45-32 advantage with 2:27 to go before halftime, going into the break up 45-35. Six different players scored during that run for Oregon, including Dotson, who scored off a rebound and then made a 3-pointer on consecutive possessions. The Lumberjacks slowly picked away at the Ducks’ lead in the second half until Hamilton finally gave NAU its first lead of the game with his 3-pointer. Also on Saturday: No. 15 Missouri . . . . . . . . . 83 S. Illinois-Edwardsville . . 69 COLUMBIA, Mo. — Laurence Bowers had 20 points and seven rebounds in his return from a knee injury that sidelined him all of last season, leading Missouri to a season-opening victory. No. 22 Notre Dame. . . . . . 58 Evansville. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Jack Cooley scored the first nine points of the game and finished with 19, Scott Martin had 17 rebounds and Notre Dame won its season opener. Arizona State. . . . . . . . . . . 79 Central Arkansas . . . . . . . 64 TEMPE, Ariz. — Jordan Bachynski had 17 points and 11 rebounds, Jahii Carson was steady in his debut and Arizona State used a big first-half run to roll to the win. Washington State. . . . . . . 88 Eastern Washington . . . . 69 PULLMAN, Wash. — Brock Motum added 23 points and pulled down 10 rebounds for his fourth career double-double to help Washington State win.

NBA ROUNDUP

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: PAC-12 ROUNDUP

Spurs send Blazers to third straight loss The Associated Press PORTLAND — At one point in San Antonio’s comeback against the Trail Blazers, Stephen Jackson reached out to high-five Gary Neal. Then Tim Duncan gave him an affectionate pat on the head. This one was Neal’s. Neal came off the bench to score a career-high 27 points, 20 of them in the second half, and the Spurs rallied from a 14-point third quarter deficit to beat Portland 112-109 on Saturday night. Neal, called upon to help because Tony Parker was out with the flu, played nearly 32 minutes after averaging just 17 in the Spurs’ first six games. He also had seven rebounds against Portland. “He carried us on his back,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said about Neal. “Sometimes a player will do that, and he picked a good time for it.” The Blazers nearly spoiled the night for Neal, hitting four straight 3-pointers to tie it at 109 with 40.5 seconds left, but Portland stumbled from there and was saddled with its third consecutive loss. Nicolas Batum had a career-high 33 points. Tim Duncan added 22 points and nine rebounds for the Spurs, who snapped a seven-game losing streak at the Rose Garden. “It was exciting, just to be part of a win like that,” said Neal, who is in his third NBA season. “Since I’ve been here we haven’t beat Portland in Portland, so it was a big win. A great, great team win. I’m glad we were able to pull it out in the end.” The Spurs trailed by as many as 14 points in the third quarter but opened the final period with a 14-0 run to go up 87-79. Rookie Damian Lillard and Batum each hit a 3-pointer to trim Portland’s deficit to 105103 with 1:57 to go. Duncan dunked before Wesley Matthews made a 3-pointer to get the Blazers within one with 1:28 left. Duncan made a layup, but Batum answered with another 3. Manu Ginobili made a pair of foul shots with 12.9 seconds left to give the lead back to the Spurs. After Ba-

Standings

GB — — 1 1 1½ 2 2 2 2½ 2½ 2½ 3 4 4½ 5½ GB — 1 1½ 1½ 1½ 2 2 2 2½ 3 3 3 3½ 3½ 3½

Summaries

SAN ANTONIO (112) K.Leonard 5-6 0-0 10, Duncan 7-12 8-9 22, Diaw 00 0-0 0, Mills 3-9 0-0 7, Green 4-7 1-2 10, Jackson 3-8 5-6 13, Splitter 2-3 2-2 6, Neal 11-16 3-4 27, Ginobili

The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Marqise Lee caught 10 passes for 161 yards and a touchdown, Curtis McNeal rushed for 163 yards and two more scores, and No. 21 Southern California bounced back from consecutive losses with a 38-17 victory over skidding Arizona State on Saturday. Matt Barkley threw for 222 yards and three TDs while becoming the leading passer in conference history for the Trojans (7-3, 5-3 Pac12), who overcame a slow start and five turnovers to snap their two-game skid. Also on Saturday: No. 17 UCLA . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 Washington State. . . . . . . . .36 PULLMAN, Wash. —

Brett Hundley threw three touchdown passes to help UCLA beat Washington State. Arizona . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56 Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31 TUCSON, Ariz. — Ka’Deem Carey ran for a Pac-12 record 366 yards and scored five touchdowns, powering Arizona to a rout of Colorado. Washington . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 Utah. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 SEATTLE — Keith Price and Washington’s offense finally broke out, with the quarterback throwing for two touchdowns and running for another, and Washington become bowl eligible for the third straight season with a win over Utah.

Don Ryan / The Associated Press

COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD Pac-12

tum missed a 3 that would have given Portland the lead, Stephen Jackson went one for two at the line with 4.4 seconds to go. Portland star LaMarcus Aldridge missed a desperation 3-pointer at the buzzer. Batum said he felt good about the 3-pointer he missed with 7.8 seconds left. “We should have won the game before that. I need to make those shots, but we should have won the game before that,” he said. Parker and Duncan weren’t feeling well but both played in San Antonio’s 97-86 victory over Sacramento on Friday night. Jackson missed that game because of the virus, but returned to face the Blazers. Patty Mills started in Parker’s place. After playing only sparingly in San Antonio’s first five games, Mills had 18 points in just over 21 minutes against the Kings. Mills spent two seasons in Portland, which selected him with the 55th overall pick of the 2009 draft. Against the Blazers Mills finished with seven points. Also on Saturday: Rockets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 Pistons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 HOUSTON — James Harden scored 20 points, Omer Asik had 14 and Houston beat winless Detroit in its first game without coach Kevin McHale. The team announced earlier Saturday that McHale was taking an immediate leave of absence to deal with a family matter.

5-8 6-8 17, Bonner 0-1 0-0 0, Joseph 0-0 0-0 0, De Colo 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-70 25-31 112. PORTLAND (109) Batum 11-18 6-6 33, Aldridge 12-26 5-6 29, Hickson 5-8 3-4 13, Lillard 8-16 0-1 20, Matthews 4-11 1-2 10, Price 0-3 0-0 0, M.Leonard 1-3 0-0 2, Babbitt 0-1 0-0 0, Pavlovic 1-2 0-0 2, Barton 0-1 0-0 0, Jeffries 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-89 15-19 109. San Antonio 26 17 30 39 — 112 Portland 26 26 27 30 — 109 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 7-18 (Neal 2-3, Jackson 2-5, Mills 1-2, Ginobili 1-3, Green 1-3, Bonner 01, K.Leonard 0-1), Portland 10-22 (Batum 5-7, Lillard 4-8, Matthews 1-3, Price 0-1, Babbitt 0-1, Aldridge 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 43 (Duncan 9), Portland 44 (Hickson 14). Assists—San Antonio 20 (Mills, Ginobili 4), Portland 23 (Aldridge 7). Total Fouls—San Antonio 20, Portland 23. Technicals—San Antonio defensive three second. A—20,447 (19,980).

Nuggets 107, Warriors 101 DENVER (107) Gallinari 8-22 2-2 21, Faried 8-13 2-6 18, Koufos 3-6 1-2 7, Lawson 3-13 3-6 9, Iguodala 7-24 3-3 19, McGee 3-8 1-2 7, Brewer 5-12 1-2 11, A.Miller 6-15 3-4 15. Totals 43-113 16-27 107. GOLDEN STATE (101) Barnes 2-5 2-4 7, Lee 7-19 4-6 18, Ezeli 0-2 0-0 0, Curry 7-17 2-2 19, Thompson 9-26 0-2 23, Biedrins 0-2 2-2 2, Jack 4-11 0-0 8, Jefferson 1-6 0-0 2, Landry 9-14 4-7 22, Green 0-0 0-0 0, Bazemore 0-0 0-0 0, Jenkins 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 39-102 14-23 101. Denver 24 16 22 24 8 13 — 107 Golden State 13 26 20 27 8 7 — 101

Jazz 94, Suns 81 PHOENIX (81) Beasley 3-9 1-2 7, Scola 7-19 7-7 21, Gortat 0-6 12 1, Dragic 6-13 0-0 13, Dudley 7-10 0-0 16, Brown 19 1-2 4, Morris 2-5 2-2 6, Tucker 2-3 0-0 4, Telfair 4-13 1-2 9, Johnson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-87 13-17 81. UTAH (94) Ma.Williams 5-10 2-2 13, Millsap 7-11 4-7 18, Jefferson 12-20 3-4 27, Tinsley 0-3 0-0 0, Hayward 6-17 5-7 18, Favors 4-5 2-2 10, Kanter 3-3 0-1 6, Foye 0-7 0-0 0, Burks 1-2 0-1 2. Totals 38-78 16-24 94. Phoenix 19 24 18 20 — 81 Utah 29 21 27 17 — 94

Bulls 87, Timberwolves 80 MINNESOTA (80) Kirilenko 3-9 5-6 11, Williams 0-10 2-2 2, Pekovic 8-13 2-4 18, Ridnour 4-12 1-1 10, Budinger 4-8 0-0 9, Shved 3-11 1-2 7, Stiemsma 0-4 0-0 0, Cunningham 7-12 0-0 14, Lee 4-6 0-0 9. Totals 33-85 11-15 80. CHICAGO (87) Deng 6-12 4-4 16, Boozer 0-5 2-2 2, Noah 7-12 3-4 17, Hinrich 0-4 0-0 0, Hamilton 5-10 0-0 12, Gibson 3-9 2-2 8, Robinson 8-14 1-2 18, Mohammed 0-2 1-2 1, Belinelli 4-9 0-0 11, Butler 0-0 0-0 0, Teague 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 34-80 13-16 87. Minnesota 19 22 18 21 — 80 Chicago 20 20 23 24 — 87

Saturday’s Games

Spurs 112, Trail Blazers 109

USC handles Arizona State

San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan, right, backs in on Portland Trail Blazers center J.J. Hickson during the first half of Saturday night’s game in Portland.

Bobcats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101 Mavericks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .97 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Rookie Michael KiddGilchrist had a career-high 25 points and 12 rebounds to help Charlotte snap a 16-game losing streak against Dallas. Pacers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89 Wizards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .85 INDIANAPOLIS — Paul George scored 20 points and Indiana stopped a threegame slide with a win over Washington. Bulls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87 Timberwolves. . . . . . . . . . . . . .80 CHICAGO — Nate Robinson scored 18 points and Chicago ended Minnesota’s threegame winning streak. 76ers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93 Raptors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83 TORONTO — Thaddeus Young, Jrue Holiday and Nick Young scored 16 points apiece, helping the 76ers pick up another road win. Celtics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96 Bucks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92 MILWAUKEE — Paul Pierce scored 25 points, Kevin Garnett added 18 and Boston rallied for the victory. Jazz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94 Suns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81 SALT LAKE CITY — Al Jefferson had 27 points and 14 rebounds, and Utah built a 22-point lead and held on for a victory over Phoenix. Nuggets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107 Warriors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101 OAKLAND, Calif. — Danilo Gallinari scored five of his 21 points in the final 36 seconds and Denver closed with an 110 run to beat Golden State in double overtime.

NBA SCOREBOARD NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Conference Glance All Times PST ——— EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct d-New York 4 0 1.000 d-Miami 5 1 .833 d-Chicago 4 2 .667 Philadelphia 4 2 .667 Milwaukee 3 2 .600 Brooklyn 2 2 .500 Atlanta 2 2 .500 Boston 3 3 .500 Indiana 3 4 .429 Charlotte 2 3 .400 Orlando 2 3 .400 Cleveland 2 4 .333 Toronto 1 5 .167 Washington 0 5 .000 Detroit 0 7 .000 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct d-San Antonio 6 1 .857 Memphis 4 1 .800 d-L.A. Clippers 4 2 .667 d-Oklahoma City 4 2 .667 Minnesota 4 2 .667 New Orleans 3 2 .600 Denver 4 3 .571 Dallas 4 3 .571 Houston 3 3 .500 Utah 3 4 .429 Golden State 3 4 .429 Phoenix 3 4 .429 Portland 2 4 .333 Sacramento 2 4 .333 L.A. Lakers 2 4 .333 d-division leader ——— Saturday’s Games Philadelphia 93, Toronto 83 Indiana 89, Washington 85 Charlotte 101, Dallas 97, OT Chicago 87, Minnesota 80 Houston 96, Detroit 82 Boston 96, Milwaukee 92 Utah 94, Phoenix 81 San Antonio 112, Portland 109 Denver 107, Golden State 101, 2OT Today’s Games Orlando at Brooklyn, noon Atlanta at L.A. Clippers, 12:30 p.m. Miami at Memphis, 3 p.m. Cleveland at Oklahoma City, 4 p.m. Sacramento at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m. Monday’s Games Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Utah at Toronto, 4 p.m. Oklahoma City at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 5 p.m. Miami at Houston, 5 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Denver at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Portland, 7 p.m.

D3

Rockets 96, Pistons 82 DETROIT (82) Prince 6-9 0-0 13, Maxiell 3-6 0-0 6, Monroe 4-10 4-4 12, Knight 6-10 2-2 16, Stuckey 4-12 0-0 8, Jerebko 3-12 0-0 8, Singler 0-5 0-0 0, Drummond 2-2 3-6 7, Bynum 0-4 0-0 0, Villanueva 1-5 0-2 3, Middleton 1-3

2-2 4, Daye 2-2 0-0 5. Totals 32-80 11-16 82. HOUSTON (96) Parsons 3-10 0-0 8, Patterson 1-5 0-0 2, Asik 5-12 4-4 14, Lin 2-7 2-2 7, Harden 6-14 6-7 20, Douglas 3-7 4-4 11, Morris 6-7 0-2 12, Delfino 2-7 0-1 5, Smith 0-2 2-2 2, Jones 1-6 2-2 5, Aldrich 1-2 0-0 2, Cook 2-2 0-0 5, Motiejunas 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 33-82 21-26 96. Detroit 15 26 16 25 — 82 Houston 20 27 25 24 — 96

Bobcats 101, Mavericks 97 DALLAS (97) Crowder 2-5 0-0 4, Brand 3-7 4-4 10, Wright 3-7 2-4 8, Collison 7-14 0-0 14, Mayo 6-12 8-8 22, Kaman 2-5 2-2 6, Murphy 3-9 0-0 8, Beaubois 0-1 1-2 1, Da.Jones 0-2 5-6 5, Carter 6-15 2-2 19, Do.Jones 0-2 0-2 0. Totals 32-79 24-30 97. CHARLOTTE (101) Kidd-Gilchrist 8-12 9-10 25, Mullens 3-9 0-0 7, Haywood 4-7 0-2 8, Walker 10-22 6-8 26, Taylor 410 0-0 8, Gordon 4-14 1-4 11, Biyombo 0-0 0-0 0, Thomas 2-2 0-0 4, Sessions 5-15 2-4 12, Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Higgins 0-1 0-0 0, Diop 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 4095 18-28 101. Dallas 21 34 18 18 6 — 97 Charlotte 24 20 24 23 10 — 101

76ers 93, Raptors 83 PHILADELPHIA (93) T.Young 5-11 6-6 16, Wright 5-12 1-1 15, Allen 0-5 0-0 0, Turner 2-7 4-5 8, Holiday 6-11 3-5 16, Hawes 5-10 2-4 12, N.Young 7-12 1-2 16, Ivey 3-3 2-2 8, Wilkins 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 34-73 19-25 93. TORONTO (83) Anderson 3-8 0-0 7, Bargnani 9-19 2-4 23, Valanciunas 3-6 2-2 8, Calderon 5-11 0-0 14, DeRozan 6-17 6-8 19, Johnson 1-2 0-0 2, Ross 2-5 0-0 6, Lucas 1-7 1-2 4, Davis 0-1 0-0 0, Kleiza 0-1 0-0 0, McGuire 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 30-79 11-16 83. Philadelphia 20 32 17 24 — 93 Toronto 26 7 29 21 — 83

Pacers 89, Wizards 85 WASHINGTON (85) Ariza 2-5 0-0 4, Booker 5-11 0-0 10, Okafor 8-18 1-2 17, Price 5-12 0-0 12, Beal 6-11 2-3 17, Vesely 01 0-0 0, Pargo 0-1 0-0 0, Seraphin 2-7 0-0 4, Webster 2-4 2-2 8, Crawford 3-6 0-0 9, Singleton 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 35-79 5-7 85. INDIANA (89) George 8-12 2-2 20, West 4-16 3-3 11, Hibbert 315 1-2 7, Hill 3-9 1-2 8, Stephenson 5-7 0-0 12, Green 6-12 2-2 15, T.Hansbrough 1-2 4-12 6, Mahinmi 3-4 1-1 7, Augustin 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 34-80 14-24 89. Washington 22 27 23 13 — 85 Indiana 23 26 21 19 — 89

Celtics 96, Bucks 92 BOSTON (96) Pierce 8-18 6-8 25, Bass 3-6 2-2 8, Garnett 6-10 6-6 18, Rondo 4-9 2-4 10, Terry 5-7 3-4 15, Wilcox 3-5 0-0 6, Sullinger 0-0 2-2 2, Green 3-8 6-8 12, Lee 0-3 0-0 0, Barbosa 0-6 0-0 0. Totals 32-72 27-34 96. MILWAUKEE (92) Harris 1-3 0-0 2, Ilyasova 3-12 3-6 10, Dalembert 6-8 2-4 14, Jennings 1-11 1-2 4, Ellis 11-24 9-10 32, Dunleavy 1-4 0-0 2, Sanders 4-7 2-2 10, Daniels 5-9 2-2 12, Udoh 2-5 0-0 4, Udrih 1-5 0-0 2. Totals 3588 19-26 92. Boston 20 19 25 32 — 96 Milwaukee 22 20 26 24 — 92

All Times Pacific ——— North Conf. Overall Oregon 7-0 10-0 Stanford 6-1 8-2 Oregon State 5-2 7-2 Washington 4-3 6-4 California 2-6 3-8 Washington State 0-7 2-8 South Conf. Overall UCLA 5-2 8-2 USC 5-3 7-3 Arizona 3-4 6-4 Arizona State 3-4 5-5 Utah 2-5 4-6 Colorado 1-6 1-9 Saturday’s Games Arizona 56, Colorado 31 Stanford 27, Oregon State 23 USC 38, Arizona State 17 Oregon 59, California 17 Washington 34, Utah 15 UCLA 44, Washington State 36 Saturday, Nov. 17 Washington State at Arizona State, TBA USC at UCLA, TBA Arizona at Utah, TBA Stanford at Oregon, TBA Washington at Colorado, 10:30 a.m. California at Oregon State, 7:30 p.m. Saturday’s Summaries

No. 16 Stanford 27, No. 13 Oregon St. 23 Oregon St. Stanford

0 10 13 0 — 23 14 0 7 6 — 27 First Quarter Stan—Taylor 1 run (Williamson kick), 5:41. Stan—Hewitt 12 pass from Hogan (Williamson kick), :31. Second Quarter OrSt—Ward 7 run (Romaine kick), 10:51. OrSt—FG Romaine 19, 2:21. Third Quarter OrSt—Wheaton 22 pass from Vaz (Romaine kick), 10:17. OrSt—FG Romaine 42, 7:34. OrSt—FG Romaine 44, 3:30. Stan—Taylor 40 pass from Hogan (Williamson kick), :00. Fourth Quarter Stan—Ertz 13 pass from Hogan (run failed), 5:07. A—47,127. OrSt Stan First downs 20 22 Rushes-yards 28-86 39-163 Passing 226 254 Comp-Att-Int 23-39-0 22-29-2 Return Yards 13 0 Punts-Avg. 5-40.4 3-45.3 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-2 Penalties-Yards 2-10 8-54 Time of Possession 28:56 31:04 ——— INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Oregon St.: Woods 15-94, Ward 5-7, Cooks 2-1, Anderson 1-0, Vaz 5-(minus 16). Stanford: Taylor 19-114, Hogan 11-49, Wilkerson 4-13, Team 4-(minus 6), Patterson 1-(minus 7). PASSING—Oregon St.: Vaz 23-38-0-226, Mannion 0-1-0-0. Stanford: Hogan 22-29-2-254. RECEIVING—Oregon St.: Wheaton 7-91, Cooks 7-82, Hamlett 2-27, Prince 2-13, Woods 2-7, Ward 2-4, K.Cummings 1-2. Stanford: Ertz 975, Hewitt 4-52, Terrell 3-36, Taylor 2-47, Young 117, Toilolo 1-13, Patterson 1-9, Montgomery 1-5.

No. 2 Oregon 59, California 17 Oregon California

14 10 14 21 — 59 7 3 7 0 — 17 First Quarter Ore—Lyerla 10 pass from Mariota (Maldonado kick), 10:41. Cal—Powe 10 pass from Bridgford (D’Amato kick), 8:04. Ore—Marshall 3 run (Maldonado kick), 1:41. Second Quarter Cal—FG D’Amato 27, 12:11. Ore—FG Maldonado 26, 6:24. Ore—Huff 10 pass from Mariota (Maldonado kick), :44. Third Quarter Cal—Sofele 4 run (D’Amato kick), 10:07. Ore—Huff 35 pass from Mariota (Maldonado kick), 6:20. Ore—Huff 39 pass from Mariota (Maldonado kick), 2:36. Fourth Quarter Ore—Lyerla 14 pass from Mariota (Maldonado kick), 14:29. Ore—Murphy 7 pass from Mariota (Maldonado kick), 11:43. Ore—Kelley 18 pass from Bennett (Maldonado kick), 3:46. A—57,672. Ore Cal First downs 32 19 Rushes-yards 48-180 40-236 Passing 395 113 Comp-Att-Int 28-37-0 9-21-2 Return Yards 37 5 Punts-Avg. 3-41.3 5-36.6 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 11-105 7-89 Time of Possession 30:47 29:13 ——— INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Oregon: Barner 20-65, Marshall 8-43, Mariota 6-42, D.Thomas 5-13, Forde 2-11, Stanton 1-8, Bennett 4-1, Team 2-(minus 3). California: Sofele 15-134, C.Anderson 11-56, Lasco 3-34, Bigelow 6-20, Stevens 1-2, Bridgford 3-1, Harper 1-(minus 11). PASSING—Oregon: Mariota 27-34-0-377, Bennett 1-3-0-18. California: Bridgford 9-21-2113. RECEIVING—Oregon: D.Thomas 8-101, Huff 5-109, Lyerla 4-64, Barner 3-35, Addison 3-17, Murphy 2-31, Lowe 2-20, Kelley 1-18. California: Harper 2-35, C.Anderson 2-33, Harris 2-26, Powe 1-10, Rodgers 1-6, Sofele 1-3.

Top 25 No. 1 Alabama (9-1) lost to No. 15 Texas A&M 2924. Next: vs. Western Carolina, Saturday. No. 2 Oregon (10-0) beat California 59-17. Next: vs. No. 16 Stanford, Saturday. No. 3 Kansas State (10-0) beat TCU 23-10. Next: at Baylor, Saturday. No. 4 Notre Dame (10-0) beat Boston College 21-6. Next: vs. Wake Forest, Saturday. No. 5 Georgia (9-1) beat Auburn 38-0. Next: vs. Georgia Southern, Saturday. No. 5 Ohio State (10-0) did not play. Next: at Wisconsin, Saturday. No. 7 Florida (9-1) beat Louisiana-Lafayette 27-20. Next: vs. Jacksonville State, Saturday.

No. 8 Florida State (9-1) beat Virginia Tech 28-22, Thursday. Next: at Maryland, Saturday. No. 9 LSU (8-2) beat No. 23 Mississippi State 3717. Next: vs. Mississippi, Saturday. No. 10 Clemson (9-1) beat Maryland 45-10. Next: vs. NC State, Saturday. No. 11 Louisville (9-1) lost to Syracuse 45-26. Next: vs. UConn, Saturday, Nov. 24. No. 12 South Carolina (8-2) beat Arkansas 38-20. Next: vs. Wofford, Saturday. No. 13 Oregon State (7-2) lost to No. 16 Stanford 27-23. Next: vs. California, Saturday. No. 14 Oklahoma (7-2) beat Baylor 42-34. Next: at West Virginia, Saturday. No. 15 Texas A&M (8-2) beat No. 1 Alabama 29-24. Next: vs. Sam Houston State, Saturday. No. 16 Stanford (8-2) beat No. 13 Oregon State 2723. Next: at No. 2 Oregon, Saturday. No. 17 UCLA (8-2) beat Washington State 44-36. Next: vs. No. 21 Southern Cal, Saturday. No. 18 Nebraska (8-2) beat Penn State 32-23. Next: vs. Minnesota, Saturday. No. 19 Louisiana Tech (9-1) beat Texas State 62-55. Next: vs. Utah State, Saturday. No. 19 Texas (8-2) beat Iowa State 33-7. Next: vs. TCU, Thursday, Nov. 22. No. 21 Southern Cal (7-3) beat Arizona State 38-17. Next: at No. 17 UCLA, Saturday. No. 22 Mississippi State (7-3) lost to No. 9 LSU 37-17. Next: vs. Arkansas, Saturday. No. 23 Toledo (8-2) lost to Ball State 34-27, Tuesday. Next: at Northern Illinois, Wednesday. No. 24 Rutgers (8-1) beat Army 28-7. Next: at Cincinnati, Saturday. No. 25 Texas Tech (7-3) beat Kansas 41-34, 2OT. Next: at Oklahoma State, Saturday.

Scores FAR WEST Arizona 56, Colorado 31 BYU 52, Idaho 13 Boise St. 49, Hawaii 14 Cal Poly 70, Idaho St. 14 Colorado St. 33, UNLV 11 E. Washington 31, UC Davis 28 Fresno St. 52, Nevada 36 Linfield 51, Pacific 17 Montana St. 65, Portland St. 30 Montana Western 41, Eastern Oregon 20 N. Colorado 42, Weber St. 34 Oregon 59, California 17 S. Utah 35, N. Arizona 29, 3OT San Diego 41, Morehead St. 28 San Diego St. 28, Air Force 9 San Jose St. 47, New Mexico St. 7 Southern Cal 38, Arizona St. 17 Southern Oregon 46, Montana Tech 28 Stanford 27, Oregon St. 23 UCLA 44, Washington St. 36 Washington 34, Utah 15 Western Oregon 38, Humboldt State 22 Whitworth 37, Lewis & Clark 20 Willamette 55, Puget Sound 0 Wyoming 28, New Mexico 23 SOUTHWEST Kansas St. 23, TCU 10 Lamar 34, Nicholls St. 24 Louisiana Tech 62, Texas St. 55 North Texas 24, South Alabama 14 Oklahoma 42, Baylor 34 Oklahoma St. 55, West Virginia 34 SMU 34, Southern Miss. 6 Texas 33, Iowa St. 7 Texas Tech 41, Kansas 34, 2OT Tulsa 41, Houston 7 UCF 31, UTEP 24 UTSA 31, McNeese St. 24 MIDWEST Cent. Michigan 34, E. Michigan 31 Davidson 28, Valparaiso 27, OT Drake 45, Butler 20 E. Illinois 39, SE Missouri 20 Kent St. 48, Miami (Ohio) 32 Michigan 38, Northwestern 31, OT Minnesota 17, Illinois 3 N. Dakota St. 20, S. Dakota St. 17 N. Iowa 24, South Dakota 21 Nebraska 32, Penn St. 23 Purdue 27, Iowa 24 UMass 22, Akron 14 Wisconsin 62, Indiana 14 Youngstown St. 31, W. Illinois 7 SOUTH Alabama St. 31, Southern U. 30 Alcorn St. 34, Texas Southern 24 Appalachian St. 33, Furman 28 Ark.-Pine Bluff 24, Grambling St. 17 Bethune-Cookman 49, Savannah St. 7 Charleston Southern 28, Gardner-Webb 10 Clemson 45, Maryland 10 Coastal Carolina 65, Presbyterian 7 Delaware St. 35, Hampton 27 E. Kentucky 55, Murray St. 24 FAU 37, W. Kentucky 28 Florida 27, Louisiana-Lafayette 20 Florida A&M 22, NC Central 21 Georgia 38, Auburn 0 Georgia Southern 69, Howard 26 Georgia Tech 68, North Carolina 50 Jackson St. 35, Alabama A&M 21 Jacksonville 40, Campbell 14 Jacksonville St. 38, Austin Peay 23 LSU 37, Mississippi St. 17 Liberty 28, Stony Brook 14 MVSU 22, Prairie View 20 Memphis 37, Tulane 23 Missouri 51, Tennessee 48, 4OT NC A&T 17, SC State 7 NC State 37, Wake Forest 6 Norfolk St. 30, Morgan St. 0 Old Dominion 41, William & Mary 31 Richmond 23, Delaware 17 SE Louisiana 42, Stephen F. Austin 27 Sam Houston St. 52, Northwestern St. 17 Samford 26, Elon 15 South Carolina 38, Arkansas 20 Tennessee Tech 45, UT-Martin 44, OT Texas A&M 29, Alabama 24 The Citadel 27, VMI 24 Troy 41, Navy 31 UAB 38, Marshall 31 Vanderbilt 27, Mississippi 26 Virginia 41, Miami 40 Wofford 16, Chattanooga 13, OT EAST Albany (NY) 38, Duquesne 31 Brown 28, Dartmouth 24 Bryant 28, CCSU 25 Buffalo 29, W. Michigan 24 Cincinnati 34, Temple 10 Colgate 35, Lehigh 24 Columbia 34, Cornell 17 Dayton 21, Marist 17 Fordham 36, Lafayette 27 Georgetown 10, Bucknell 3 Maine 51, Georgia St. 7 Notre Dame 21, Boston College 6 Penn 30, Harvard 21 Princeton 29, Yale 7 Robert Morris 21, Sacred Heart 17 Rutgers 28, Army 7 St. Francis (Pa.) 45, Monmouth (NJ) 31 Syracuse 45, Louisville 26 Towson 41, Rhode Island 10 Villanova 35, James Madison 20 Wagner 31, Holy Cross 30


D4

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

Cougars

PREP ROUNDUP

Continued from D1 “Once we found a rhythm and we started believing a little bit, we started connecting passes,” Rogers explained. “We couldn’t connect passes well in the first half. Once we started doing that, we opened them up really good, and it was kind of a matter of time before we were going to get that second goal.” In Crescent Valley, Mountain View was facing a familiar opponent. The two sides tied 1-1 back on Sept. 14 in an early-season game also staged at Mountain View. In the rematch Saturday, the Raiders put the Cougars in a hole with a first-half goal by Michael Lanahan off a corner kick. Michael Boggess doubled Crescent Valley’s lead early in the second half with a curling free kick that curved around the outside of the Mountain View wall and beat goalkeeper Levi Schlapfer to the near post. After the tallies by Lay and Razo, neither team was able to break the tie in regulation — though Crescent Valley did have an offside goal disallowed, to the Cougars’ good fortune. But Emerson struck quickly for Mountain View early in the first of two 10-minute overtime periods. After running onto a through ball from Hudson Newell, Emerson took a touch or two before finishing to the far post from the left side of the penalty area. “Far post was open. I just put it in,” Emerson said. “It was exciting. That was probably one of my favorite goals I’ve ever scored.” Tuesday’s semifinal match will be Mountain View’s third against Summit this season. The Cougars lost 1-0 in an Intermountain Conference match at Summit on Oct. 2 and tied the Storm 2-2 at home on Oct. 18. Said Emerson of the No. 1-seeded Storm: “We’ve improved a lot, and I think we can get them.” — Reporter: 541-383-0393, amiles@bendbulletin.com.

Summit girls roll to playoff win over Crescent Valley Bulletin staff report Overnight snow and an early-morning work party to clear the playing field delayed the start. But once the match got under way, Summit wasted no time taking control en route to an 8-1 victory over Crescent Valley of Corvallis in a Class 5A girls soccer quarterfinal match Saturday at Summit High. Hadlie Plummer scored two goals and assisted on three others, and Christina Edwards added two goals for the undefeated and No. 1-ranked Storm, who rolled into a semifinal match Tuesday at Corvallis High. “We were out at 9 this morning with about 20, 25 people, shoveling the field,” said Summit coach Jamie Brock. “Parents, players, volunteers — we were thankful for their help.” After a delay of about 30 minutes — the game had been scheduled to start at 11:30 a.m. — the Storm needed just four minutes to take a lead they would not surrender, when Edwards scored off a corner kick by Plummer. Seven minutes later, Plummer assisted again with a cross that Presley Quon converted for a 2-0 lead. And just two minutes after that, Plummer scored herself with an assist from Emma Malmquist, and the rout was on. Brock said she was pleased with the fast start. Crescent Valley (10-4-1) came into the quarterfinal contest as the No. 2 team from the Mid-Willamette Conference, and the Raiders were hot, riding a ninegame winning streak. “They had just beaten Corvallis (3-2 at Corvallis High on Oct. 23),” Brock observed, noting that Corvallis had defeated Summit’s Intermountain Conference rivals Bend High and Mountain View in earlyseason nonleague play. “You don’t want to give life to a team like that,” said Brock, recalling the disappointment of an upset home loss to Wilsonville on penalty kicks in the first round of last year’s state playoffs. The IMC-champion Storm (13-0-2) had no intention of allowing Crescent Valley hope. A goal by Megan Buzzas and another score by Edwards were followed by a header goal by Shannon Patterson off a corner kick by Plummer, and Summit led comfortably at halftime, 6-0. Shay Davis and Plummer tacked on second-half goals, and Crescent Valley scored on a free kick in the closing minutes to account for the final score. That goal by the Raiders was the first allowed by the Storm since Sept. 27, ending a streak of seven consecutive Summit shutouts.

Storm boys back in semifinals Glenn Sherman scored twice and Summit’s defense recorded its 11th shutout of the year — and second of the postseason — as the Storm knocked off Portland Interscholastic League champion Cleveland 2-0 on Saturday in the Class 5A boys soccer quarterfinal round. Playing on the artificial surface at the Summit High stadium, the Storm earned a berth in Tuesday’s 5A state semifinal round, in which they will host crosstown rival Mountain View at 5 p.m.

Sherman gave Summit a 1-0 lead in the eighth minute, taking advantage of a Warrior defensive miscue to get behind Cleveland’s back line. The Storm senior forward capitalized on the error, bending a shot around the Warriors’ keeper toward the far post, which the ball struck before going into the goal. “It was one of the best goals of his career,” said Summit coach Ron Kidder, whose team led 1-0 at halftime. “Getting that first punch made all the difference.” Michael Wilson set up Summit’s second goal, beating his man on the outside before crossing the ball on the ground to the near post, and Sherman tapped it in for a 2-0 lead in the 68th minute. Storm defenders Cameron Weaver, Samuel Buzzas, Austin Cole and Eli Warmenhoven, as well as midfielders Alex Arnis and Alex Bowlin, did the rest, stifling a Cleveland offense that had scored 13 goals in its previous four games. “Our defensive energy tonight was outstanding,” Kidder said. “We put them under a lot of pressure and were able to capitalize and create a lot of opportunities on their turnovers. “This team caused me and our team to worry,” Kidder added about Cleveland. “But we came out stronger, faster and more athletic than them tonight. They weren’t ready to withstand our pressure.”

Bend girls fall to Willamette Despite scoring two goals late in the second half to force overtime, Bend High fell to Willamette of Eugene 4-3 on Saturday as the Wolverines won 6-5 on penalty kicks in a Class 5A girls soccer quarterfinal match at 15th Street Field. Down 3-1 early into the second half, the Lava Bears (11-4 overall) rallied back and tied the score 3-3 with late scores by Delaney Crook and Alyssa Pease. Neither team scored in the two 10-minute overtime periods before the Wolverines, champions of the Mid-Willamette League, outlasted Bend on penalty kicks. “Yeah, it’s tough to end the season on PKs,” Lava Bear coach Mackenzie Groshong said. “I thought our girls played better of the two teams. We had more opportunites, we definitely took more shots. It was more of an offensive game for us, we just couldn’t get it in there.” Willamette, which improved to 13-3 overall and will host Sherwood on Tuesday in the 5A semifinal round, took a 1-0 lead in the seventh minute of the game before Pease recorded her first goal in the 19th minute, tying the score 1-1. The Wolverines scored two quick goals immediately after halftime and led 3-1 with 36 minutes left in the contest. Crook made it 3-2 in the 67th minute and Pease, with her second goal of the game, scored the equalizer in the 70th minute. “We hung in there and didn’t give up,” Groshong said. “It would have been easy to give up … but we rallied back and fired back. I was very impressed with their attitudes and actions.” Bend and Willamette traded misses and makes in the PK shootout, Groshong said, but when the Bears failed to convert their eighth attempt, the Wolverines

PREP SCOREBOARD Soccer OSAA State Playoffs BOYS CLASS 6A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Clackamas 5, Forest Grove 1 Lincoln 3, McMinnville 0 Jesuit 2, Central Catholic 0 Sunset 3, South Eugene 2 Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Clackamas at Lincoln Jesuit at Sunset CLASS 5A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Woodburn 3, Liberty 2 Hood River Valley 2, Wilsonville 1 Mountain View 3, Crescent Valley 2, OT Summit 2, Cleveland 0 Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Hood River Valley at Woodburn Mountain View at Summit CLASS 4A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results McLoughlin 3, Henley 0 Philomath 1, Molalla 0 La Salle Prep 2, Stayton 0 Phoenix 1, Ontario 0, OT Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Philomath at McLoughlin Phoenix at La Salle CLASS 3A/2A/1A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Oregon Episcopal 7, Santiam Christian 0 Catlin Gable 2, Portland Christian 0 Riverside 4, Westside Christian 1 Riverdale 1, Delphian 0 (4-1 PKs) Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Oregon Episcopal at Catlin Gable, 4:30 p.m. Riverside at Riverdale GIRLS CLASS 6A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Clackamas 1, Sunset 0 Lakeridge 2, Tigard 1 Thurston 3, Jesuit 2 (5-4 PKs) Grant 2, Canby 1 Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Clackamas at Lakeridge Thurston at Grant CLASS 5A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Summit 8, Crescent Valley 1 Corvallis 2, Wilsonville 0 Willamette 4, Bend 3 (6-5 PKs) Sherwood 2, Putnam 0 Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Summit at Corvallis, 5:30 p.m. Sherwood at Willamette CLASS 4A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Mazama 2, North Bend/OR Coast Tech 0 Philomath 3, La Grande 2 Gladstone 3. Molalla 0 Scappoose 2, La Salle Prep 1 (6-5 PKs) Semifinals Tuesday’s Games Philomath at Mazama, 4 p.m. Gladstone at Scappoose, 2 p.m. CLASS 3A/2A/1A Quarterfinals Saturday’s Results Oregon Episcopal 4, Corbett 0 St. Mary’s, Medford 2, Catlin Gabel 1, OT Glide 2, Western Mennonite/Perrydale 0

Valley Catholic 6, Cascade Christian 0 Semifinals Tuesday’s Games St. Mary’s, Medford, at Oregon Episcopal Glide at Valley Catholic

Volleyball OSAA STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS CLASS 6A At Liberty High School, Hillsboro Friday’s Results Quarterfinals Central Catholic def. Gresham, 25-13, 25-18, 25-12 Roseburg def. Barlow, 25-23, 25-20, 25-22 Clackamas def. Sheldon, 25-17, 25-15, 25-17 Jesuit def. Century, 25-11, 25-17, 25-18 Semifinals Roseburg def. Central Catholic, 25-17, 20-25, 25-22, 18-25, 15-13 Jesuit def. Clackamas, 25-18, 25-15, 25-19 Saturday’s Results Consolation Semifinals Gresham def. Barlow, 25-16, 25-17, 25-16 Sheldon def. Century, 25-17, 27-29, 25-17, 25-20 Fourth/Sixth Place Gresham def. Sheldon, 17-25, 21-25, 25-23, 25-23, 15-10 Third/Fifth Place Central Catholic def. Clackamas, 2515, 24-26, 18-25, 25-16, 15-13 Final Jesuit def. Roseburg, 25-23, 22-25, 19-25, 25-19, 15-8 CLASS 5A At Liberty High School, Hillsboro Friday’s Results Quarterfinals West Albany def. Lebanon, 25-11, 2511, 25-15 Marshfield def. Corvallis, 18-25, 2515, 25-16, 25-21 Bend def. Summit, 25-14, 25-21, 2125, 25-22 Churchill def. Pendleton, 25-16, 20-25, 25-21, 25-11 Semifinals West Albany def. Marshfield, 25-17, 25-11, 25-16 Churchill def. Bend, 25-12, 25-7, 25-14 Saturday’s Results Consolation Semifinals Lebanon def. Corvallis, 25-17, 25-22, 25-16 Summit def. Pendleton, 18-25, 26-24, 25-23, 9-25, 15-10 Fourth/Sixth Place Summit def. Lebanon, 25-17, 18-25, 25-19, 26-24 Third/Fifth Place Marshfield def. Bend, 25-18, 25-9, 25-21 Final West Albany def. Churchill, 25-17, 2025, 25-17, 25-14 CLASS 4A At Lane Community College, Eugene Friday’s Results Quarterfinals Crook County def. Elmira, 25-11, 2523, 25-8 Madras def. La Grande, 25-20, 24-26, 25-13, 20-25, 16-14 Banks def. Phoenix, 25-21, 25-8, 25-17 Astoria def. Sisters, 25-22, 25-21, 2225, 19-25, 15-13 Semifinals Crook County def. Madras, 25-10, 2517, 25-17 Astoria def. Banks, 25-14, 20-25, 2519, 25-23 Saturday’s Results Consolation Semifinals La Grande def. Elmira, 25-20, 25-16,

19-25, 20-25, 15-10 Sisters def. Phoenix, 25-16, 25-19, 25-19 Fourth/Sixth Place Sisters def. La Grande, 25-13, 25-16, 25-19 Third/Fifth Place Banks def. Madras, 26-24, 25-23, 25-19 Final Crook County def. Astoria, 25-8, 2518, 25-22 CLASS 3A At Lane Community College, Eugene Friday’s Results Quarterfinals Corbett def. Creswell, 25-23, 25-22, 25-21 Valley Catholic def. Cascade Christian, 25-23, 25-14, 26-28, 25-19 Santiam Christian def. Nyssa, 25-17, 25-15, 25-13 Blanchet Catholic def. Oregon Episcopal, 25-21, 22-25, 25-20, 30-28 Semifinals Corbett def. Valley Catholic, 17-25, 2521, 25-18, 25-18 Santiam Christian def. Blanchet Catholic, 25-16, 25-19, 7-25, 25-17 Saturday’s Results Consolation Semifinals Creswell def. Cascade Christian, 2518, 25-21, 25-14 Oregon Episcopal def. Nyssa, 22-25, 25-22, 26-24, 25-15 Fourth/Sixth Place Creswell def. Oregon Episcopal, 25-17, 25-20, 27-25 Third/Fifth Place Blanchet Catholic def. Valley Catholic, 25-17, 25-20, 27-25 Final Santiam Christian def. Corbett, 25-12, 25-18, 25-10 CLASS 2A At Ridgeview High School, Redmond Friday’s Results Quarterfinals Heppner def. North Douglas, 25-10, 25-21, 25-17 Culver def. Kennedy, 19-25, 25-15, 25-20, 25-12 Days Creek def. Grant Union, 25-18, 25-23, 25-16 Reedsport def. Weston-McEwen, 2514, 25-21, 23-25, 16-25, 15-13 Semifinals Culver def. Heppner, 25-20, 19-25, 25-19, 25-17 Days Creek def. Reedsport, 18-25, 2518, 25-23, 25-20 Saturday’s Results Consolation Semifinals North Douglas def. Kennedy, 18-25, 25-18, 25-19, 16-25, 15-9 Grant Union def. Weston-McEwen, 2025, 26-28, 25-10, 25-20, 15-12 Fourth/Sixth Place Grant Union def. North Douglas, 25-16, 25-20, 27-25 Third/Fifth Place Reedsport def. Heppner, 25-22, 17-25, 25-22, 25-23 Final Culver def. Days Creek, 13-25, 25-22, 16-25, 25-22, 15-11 CLASS 1A At Ridgeview High School, Redmond Friday’s Results Quarterfinals Powder Valley def. Yoncalla, 25-16, 25-17, 25-15 St. Paul def. Lowell, 25-22, 23-25, 2512, 25-15 Imbler def. Hosanna Christian, 25-24, 25-23, 25-11 Portland Lutheran def. Perrydale, 2826, 25-10, 16-25, 25-22 Semifinals Powder Valley def. St. Paul, 27-25, 2519, 25-17 Imbler def. Portland Lutheran, 21-25,

25-23, 25-12, 25-18 Saturday’s Results Consolation Semifinals Yoncalla def. Lowell, 25-23, 25-22, 25-18 Hosanna Christian def. Perrydale, 2515, 16-25, 25-17, 26-24 Fourth/Sixth Place Hosanna Christian def. Yoncalla, 25-9, 25-18, 25-16 Third/Fifth Place St. Paul def. Portland Lutheran, 25-13, 25-20, 19-25, 25-17 Final Powder Valley def. Imbler, 25-18, 1525, 25-21, 20-25, 15-12

Football OSAA State Playoffs CLASS 6A Round 2 Friday, Nov. 16 Games Thurston at Jesuit Sprague at Tualatin Roseburg at Sheldon Century at Southridge South Medford at Lake Oswego West Salem at Aloha Canby at Tigard, 7 p.m. Sunset at Central Catholic CLASS 5A Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16 Games Crescent Valley at Redmond, 7 p.m. Mountain View at Marist (Willamette HS), 7 p.m. West Albany at Silverton, 7 p.m. Springfield at Sherwood, 7 p.m. CLASS 4A Round 1 Saturday’s Results Baker 55, Cottage Grove 42 Ontario 39, North Valley 34 Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16 Games Baker at Scappoose Philomath at Cascade North Bend/OR Coast Tech at Gladstone Ontario at La Salle Prep CLASS 3A Round 1 Saturday’s Results Pleasant Hill 31, Nyssa 28 Cascade Christian 35, Vale 7 Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16 Games Willamina at Dayton Santiam Christian at Horizon Christian, 7 p.m. Rainier at Scio Pleasant Hill at Cascade Christian CLASS 2A Round 1 Saturday’s Results Kennedy 57, Bonanza 0 Oakland 65, Enterprise 12 Gold Beach 14, Knappa 8 Heppner 55, Oakridge 29 Grant Union 29, Regis 26 Lost River 20, Monroe 18 Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16 Games Central Linn at Kennedy Oakland at Gold Beach Portland Christian at Heppner Grant Union at Lost River CLASS 1A Round 1 Saturday’s Results Triad 62, Adrian 52 Dufur 46, Crow 8 Lowell 64, Echo 16 Camas Valley 94, Cove 12 Imbler 60, Triangle Lake 24 Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16 Games Triad at St. Paul Dufur at Lowell Sherman at Camas Valley Perrydale at Imbler

made theirs and won the match. “We had a couple of opportunities to win it in overtime, balls that went right past the goal, but it didn’t go our way,” Groshong said. “They gave it their all. Any coach would be proud.”

Summit fourth, Bend fifth at 5A volleyball tourney HILLSBORO — Summit rebounded from Friday’s quarterfinal loss to Bend High and won two consolation matches Saturday to finish 2-1 at the Class 5A state volleyball tournament and claim fourth place at state. The Lava Bears were swept by Marshfield of Coos Bay, 25-18, 25-9, 25-21 in the third-place match, ending the two-day tournament in fifth place. “It was a strong finish to a crazy season,” said Storm coach Jill Waskom, who had just one senior on her roster in 2012. Summit, the 2011 state champion, defeated Pendleton 18-25, 26-24, 25-23, 9-25, 15-10 in a Saturday morning consolation match before rolling past Lebanon 25-17, 18-25, 25-19, 26-24 in the fourth-place/ sixth-place match. Renee Kenneally came up big for the Storm against Pendleton with 14 kills, while Noelle Bangert was a key contributor for Summit against Lebanon, going 13 of 13 from the service line with four aces, one of which ended the match. Laney Hayes, Summit’s lone senior, ended her high school career with 37 combined kills during Saturday’s two matches, and freshman Jordan Waskom posted 38 assists and 11 digs in the Storm’s fourthplace match. “This is great momentum for next year,” Jill Waskom said. “You look around at all the other teams here and they all have five or six seniors.” Bend High finished the tournament with a 1-2 mark and its first state trophy since taking fourth place in the old large-school 4A tournament in 1995.

Area water polo teams wrap up at state BEAVERTON — Summit’s bid for a state title was denied by the defending champion Saturday, as the Storm fell 17-3 to West Albany in the 5/4A girls final at the 2012 Oregon High School Water Polo Championships. Laura Robson, Vanessa Rodgers and Kayanna Heffner scored the goals for Summit, which also got eight blocked shots from Kaylin Ivy. The Storm advanced to the championship match with a 15-13 victory over Madras in a semifinal game during Friday’s first day of state play at Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center. The Madras girls played in the third-place game Saturday morning and lost 9-7 to Parkrose. Another third-place contest Saturday was an allBend affair, as Summit downed Mountain View 15-4 in a 5/4A boys match. The Storm led just 2-0 after one quarter, but behind Aiden Soles (seven goals) and Brent Soles (three goals), they pulled away to win. Stuart Wettstein had eight saves for Summit, and Kyle Alhert had four saves. For Mountain View, Kodiak Ardnt scored two goals and John Murphy and Noah Cox scored one apiece. Tracy Pitcher had 14 saves for the Cougars, and Nate Cox had three assists and three steals.


SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Crook County Continued from D1 Makayla Lindburg racked up a game-high 18 kills to go along with seven digs, earning the honor of player of the match for Crook County. Hannah Troutman, who joined Lindburg on the all-tournament first team, finished with 17 kills and 10 digs. Kayla Hamilton delivered 39 assists and seven digs, and Ali Apperson picked up six service aces. “It’s pretty great because every year, something’s different, and you don’t really know what to expect coming into this,” said Lindburg, who also earned player of the championship match in her freshman season. “Once you finally get here, it’s just completely overwhelming.” Lindburg, who now has four state championships as a Cowgirl, said each season’s run at the title has been unique, with different strategies and skills being implemented each year. This time around, as Honl pointed out, Crook County’s unique quality was its youth. “Throughout the year, we kind of had to work on different things,” Lindburg said. “Common things and just simple things like knowing where to be, listening to the coach and applying it. It’s finally there now.” That inexperience, however, did not stop the Cowgirls from setting eight lofty goals involving some of the area’s top tournaments. With the state championship hardware

Ivar Vong / For The Bulletin

Crook County celebrates after beating Astoria 3-0 in the Class 4A volleyball championship in Eugene on Saturday night.

in hand on Saturday night, with a flawless run at the title, seven of the eight goals were accomplished. “I thought they (the goals) were way too huge, but they wanted to do it,” Honl said. “They’re just tough. They all visualize, and we do a lot of different things to make them

strong and tough mentally, and they are. They’re tough.” Seven state championships have gone to the Cowgirls. Some would argue that Honl has built and maintained a dynasty in Prineville. But while Troutman wouldn’t call it that exactly, it does not mean Crook County cannot contin-

ue its dominance. “I don’t think it’s a dynasty, necessarily,” Troutman said. “But if we set our hearts on it, we can do it again.” The Cowgirls will send off three seniors, including Lindburg, whom Honl described as a “pretty amazing player.” The task of replacing those

Culver Continued from D1 The Bulldogs (26-5 overall), whose last loss was way back in September, struggled early in front of a gym filled with black-and-orange-clad supporters. Little was almost unstoppable late, though, and Culver forced a game five. In the fifth and final set the two teams were tied 66 early on, but Little served three straight points to give the Bulldogs a 9-6 lead that finally created some separation. With Culver ahead 13-11 and freshman Lynze Schonneker at the service line — she was textbook on both serves — Alley recorded a kill to give Culver a 14-11 lead before senior Cassandra Fulton ended her high school career with a kill that gave the Bulldogs their second state title in school history. “We just all came together,” said Little, who was named Culver’s outstanding player of the match. The grandstands at Ridgview exploded the instant Fulton’s final kill hit the court, with hats flying onto the floor. “It doesn’t matter if we were 30 miles or 300 miles away, our fans would be here,” Viggiano said. “They’re the best.” Fulton added seven kills and two blocks, and Cleveland

first, winning her seventh consecutive state title with the Cowgirls at the Class 4A tournament in Eugene about an hour before her pupil captured her first crown. “I can’t wait to call her,” Viggiano said. “I’m proud to carry on her legacy.” — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com.

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Culver coach Randi Viggiano, center, celebrates with senior Jahnie Cleveland (6) after Culver won the Class 2A state championship game against Days Creek on Saturday night at Ridgeview High School in Redmond.

added two service aces. In just her third season guiding the Bulldogs, Viggiano, who coaches the team with her husband, Nick, has turned Culver into one of the premier programs in 2A. The Bulldogs went 2-1 at state a

year ago and finished fourth, with their only loss coming to Days Creek in the quarterfinal round. “It was nice to get them back after last year,” Little said. Isabel Golemon led the Wolves with 16 kills and 16

Ducks Continued from D1 Oregon raced past the Bears with their passing game instead of the vaunted running attack that had rushed for at least 400 yards in the previous three games. Cal held Barner to 65 yards on 20 carries — 256 fewer yards than he had last week against USC — and even knocked him out briefly with a hard hit that sent him to the locker room in the first half. Mariota also left the game after a hard fall late in the second quarter but returned the following series. He then helped the Ducks break the game open in the second half with four TD passes, including two to Josh Huff. Mariota completed 27 of 34 passes and tied the school TD record last achieved by Darron Thomas last year against Nevada. Huff finished with five catches for 109 yards and three scores as the Ducks set a major college football record by scoring at least 40 points for a 13th straight game. The biggest moment came midway through the third quarter after the Bears cut Oregon’s lead to 24-17 and got a stop on defense to fire up a crowd that has had little to cheer about this season. Isi Sofele, who rushed for 134 yards, had been gashing Oregon’s defense in the second half and started this drive with a 14-yard run. But

seniors seems difficult, Troutman said, as Crook County welcomes in a few new faces to work its way back to the top. Honl will get to back to work right away. “As soon as this is over, on the bus ride home, I start thinking about who’s going to fill positions and what we’re going to

digs. Days Creek, like Culver, loses just two seniors. A protege of Crook County coach Rosie Honl, Viggiano said she received a call from her former boss earlier in the day telling her, “Let’s do this together!” Honl did her part

Mariota left the game holding his left arm in the second quarter but returned after Vincenzo D’Amato missed a 48-yard field goal late in the half for Cal. Mariota drove the Ducks 69 yards, capped by a 10-yard pass to Huff that made it 24-10 at the half.

Jose Sanchez / The Associated Press

Oregon tight end Colt Lyerla (15) grabs a 10-yard touchdown pass in front of California defensive back Josh Hill (23) and defensive back Michael Lowe (5) during the first half of Saturday night’s game in Berkeley, Calif.

Allan Bridgford threw an incomplete pass, Brendan Bigelow was stopped for a 1yard gain and then Bridgford was intercepted by Boseko Lokombo on a screen pass under heavy pressure from Arik Armstead. Mariota found Huff on a 35yard touchdown pass on the next play to make it 31-17 and the Ducks rolled from there. Mariota and Huff teamed up on a 39-yard score on the next drive and the rout was on.

That ended the Bears chances in the final home game of the season and perhaps final home game for coach Jeff Tedford at Cal. There have been questions raised about Tedford’s status after missing a bowl for the second time in three years. The Bears have lost four straight for the first time ever under Tedford. Bridgford finished 9 for 21 for 113 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

D5

do for next year,” she said. In the 4A consolation matches Saturday, Sisters swept La Grande 25-13, 25-16, 25-19 to take third place, and Madras fell in three games to Banks but ended the tourney in fifth place. The Outlaws went 2-1 at state, losing their quarterfinal match to Astoria before defeating Phoenix and the Greater Oregon League champion Tigers on Saturday to improve on last year’s fifth-place finish. For Sisters, senior Megan Minke was named to the alltournament first team, and seniors Shannon Fouts and Duree Standley and sophomore Nila Lukens were named to the second team. The White Buffaloes, who earned a trophy at state for the first time since 1987, lost to Cowapa League champions 26-24, 25-23, 25-19. Madras sophomore Shelby Mauritson was named to the all-tourney second team. “At the beginning of the season, our goals were to win league and make it to Eugene,” said Madras coach Jamie Smith, whose team was the Tri-Valley Conference co-champion with Estacada. “We did both and brought home a trophy, so we’re pretty satisfied.” Alexis Urbach and Sarah Brown both had 10 kills for the Buffs. Elle Renault went 11 of 12 from the service line with three aces and contributed a team-high 18 assists. Urbach added 14 digs. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, glucas@bendbulletin.com.


D6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2012

COL L EGE F OO T BA L L

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: TOP 25 ROUNDUP

Oregon State

Texas A&M hands Alabama first loss The Associated Press TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Johnny Football and Southeastern Conference newbies Texas A&M took down the biggest bully in their new neighborhood and left No. 1 Alabama with badly bruised national championship hopes. Johnny Manziel, better known around Texas as Johnny Football, staked the 15th-ranked Aggies to a threetouchdown lead in the first quarter, and Texas A&M held on to beat the Crimson Tide 29-24 on Saturday. The Aggies (8-2, 5-2), playing in the SEC for the first season after ditching the Big 12, also might have ended the league’s run of BCS titles at six years. The defending national champion Crimson Tide (91, 6-1), who have been No. 1 almost all season, didn’t go quietly. A.J. McCarron nearly pulled off a second straight scintillating comeback. He threw one touchdown pass and motored the ball downfield before Deshazor Everett stepped in front of his fourthdown pass at the goal line with 1:36 left. Manziel passed for 253 yards and rushed for 92 and led the Aggies to a 20-0 first quarter lead. “No moment is too big for him,” coach Kevin Sumlin said of his remarkable redshirt freshman. Also on Saturday: No. 2 Kansas State . . . . . . . . .23 TCU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 FORT WORTH, Texas — Collin Klein ran for two touchdowns, a week after leaving the game early with an apparent head injury. The Wildcats improved to 10-0 for only the second time under coach Bill Snyder, and moved within two wins of likely reaching their first BCS championship game. No. 4 Notre Dame. . . . . . . . . . .21 Boston College. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 BOSTON — Everett Golson ran for a touchdown and threw

Dave Martin / The Associated Press

Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel (2) is joined by wide receiver Kenric McNeal (5) and defensive back Dustin Harris (22) as they celebrate after the Aggies defeated top-ranked Alabama 29-24 in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday.

Montana State routs Portland State 65-30 BOZEMAN, Mont. — DeNarius McGhee threw four touchdown passes and Cody Kirk scored three TDs as Montana State routed Portland State 65-30 on Saturday. The Bobcats (9-1, 6-1 Big Sky) saw six players score in the first half, when they scored 59 points, and had touchdowns on offense, defense, and special teams in dominating the Vikings. D.J. Adams had a 69-yard touchdown run in the first quarter to cut the Bobcats’ lead to 10-7, but Portland State (3-7, 2-5) didn’t manage another first down until its final drive of the half. — The Associated Press

for two more to help Notre Dame beat Boston College and keep its national championship hopes intact. No. 5 Georgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 Auburn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 AUBURN, Ala. — Aaron Murray passed for 208 yards and three touchdowns, freshman tailbacks Todd Gurley and Keith Marshall each ran for more than 100 yards and Georgia overwhelmed Auburn, sending the Bulldogs back to the SEC championship game. No. 7 Florida . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 Louisiana-Lafayette . . . . . . . .20 GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Jelani Jenkins returned a blocked punt 36 yards for a touchdown with 2 seconds remaining and Florida rallied in

the closing minutes to avoid a huge upset. No. 9 LSU. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37 No. 23 Mississippi State. . . . . 17 BATON ROUGE, La. — Zach Mettenberger passed for 273 yards and two touchdowns, and LSU kept alive faint hope of a Southeastern Conference title. No. 10 Clemson . . . . . . . . . . . .45 Maryland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 CLEMSON, S.C. — Tajh Boyd threw for 261 yards and three touchdowns as Clemson won its sixth straight and record 12th in a row at Death Valley. Syracuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45 No. 11 Louisville . . . . . . . . . . . .26 SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Ryan Nassib threw for 246 yards and three touchdowns, Je-

rome Smith ran for 144 yards and Syracuse handed Louisville its first loss of the season. No. 12 South Carolina . . . . . . .38 Arkansas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 COLUMBIA, S.C. — Connor Shaw threw for two touchdowns and ran for another score for South Carolina. No. 14 Oklahoma . . . . . . . . . . .42 Baylor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 NORMAN, Okla. — Landry Jones threw for 277 yards and two touchdowns, Damien Williams ran for 99 yards and two scores and Bob Stoops moved into sole possession of second place on the school’s career wins list. No. 18 Nebraska. . . . . . . . . . . .32 Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 LINCOLN, Neb. — Taylor Martinez threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Jamal Turner for Nebraska’s first lead, and the Cornhuskers overcame a double-digit, second-half deficit for the fourth time this season. No. 19 Louisiana Tech. . . . . . .62 Texas State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 SAN MARCOS, Texas — Kenneth Dixon ran for four touchdowns to set a single-season NCAA freshman record and Louisiana Tech scored on all but two possessions to beat Texas State. No. 19 Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33 Iowa State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 AUSTIN, Texas — David Ash passed for 364 yards and two touchdowns and Texas honored former coach Darrell Royal by whipping Iowa State. No. 24 Rutgers . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 Army . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 PISCATAWAY, N.J. — Brandon Coleman caught his second touchdown of the game on a 31-yard pass from Gary Nova with 8:49 to play and Rutgers survived a valiant effort by mistake-prone Army. No. 25 Texas Tech . . . . . . . . . . 41 Kansas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34 LUBBOCK, Texas — Running back Eric Stephens threw a 3-yard jump pass to Darrin Moore for a touchdown in double overtime to lead Texas Tech past Kansas.

Hogan, who took over the starting role from inconsisContinued from D1 tent Josh Nunes, completed “They came back and 22 of 29 passes with two inmade some plays to help us terceptions. He also ran for win the game,” Shaw said. 49 yards on 11 carries. “Almost Shakespearean, to a Vaz finished 23-of-38 passcertain degree.” ing for 226 yards and a touchOregon State quarterback down and Storm Woods ran Cody Vaz fumbled late in for 94 yards in a deflating the fourth quarter to give the loss for Oregon State, which Cardinal (8-2, 6-1) the ball at rallied from a 14-0 deficit to the Beavers 29. The only Or- score 23 straight points and egon State (7-2, 5-2) controlled the pace turnover turned out for most of the game. to be the difference. The Beavers, Hogan audibled who haven’t played out of a run and in the Rose Bowl called the play “Spesince 1965, had their cial,” which StanBCS and Pac-12 ford also ran to con- Next up title hopes severely vert a fourth-and-9 California at damaged. in an overtime win Oregon State “We’re disapagainst Arizona earpointed obviously,” • When: lier this season, and Oregon State coach hit tight end Zach Saturday, Mike Riley said. “It 7:30 p.m. Ertz for a 13-yard was a tough loss and touchdown to make • TV: Pac-12 we had our opportuit 27-23 with 5:07 Network nities. What we did left, and Stanford • Radio: was give up the big stopped the Beavers KICE-AM 940, play two scores up KRCO-AM 690 twice more. and gave them back Now the Cardinal the momentum. will head to second-ranked That was big for them. Then Oregon next in what could the turnover gave them good be a North Division final — field position to score the if Stanford also beats UCLA winning touchdown.” in its season finale — for a Stanford started strong spot in the conference cham- and closed fast. pionship game. Oregon has After Ertz fumbled on beaten Stanford the past two Stanford’s opening possesseasons. sion, the defense stopped “We’ve got to realize Oregon State three-and-out. what’s at stake,” said Taylor, Then Hogan led a 13-play, who ran for 114 yards and a 93-yard scoring drive — the touchdown, eclipsing 1,000 Cardinal’s longest of the seayards rushing for the third son — capped by Taylor’s 1straight season. “I think ev- yard touchdown run. erybody on this team knows Hogan kept the momenthat and everybody is com- tum going, rolling to his right ing together for that one goal and hitting fullback Ryan that we all want.” Hewitt on a play-action pass. Oregon State won the Hewitt sliced back inside turnover margin 4-1 but only and bulldozed through a deconverted three points out of fender for a 12-yard TD that them — and the one mistake gave Stanford a 14-0 lead late cost the Beavers badly. in the first quarter. Vaz fumbled while shifting The Beavers came back in the ball during a scramble a hurry. and Josh Mauro recovered. They used three differAfter Ertz caught the go- ent running backs on an 81ahead touchdown, Oregon yard drive that came almost State got the ball back and exclusively on the ground. Debniak sacked Vaz on third Terron Ward finished it off down. when he ran for a 7-yard The quarterback left with score to put the Beavers on an ankle injury, and Sean the board, and Trevor RoMannion — the former start- maine kicked the first of er — threw incomplete on his three field goals to slice fourth-and-16 from the Or- Stanford’s lead to 14-10 in the egon State 37 with 1:52 left. second quarter.

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S U N D AY, N O V E M B E R 1 1 , 2 0 1 2

WHY WE SAY GRACE By Anne Lamott

Thanksgiving With

The Chew HOLIDAY TIPS AND RECIPES FROM THE HOSTS OF THE HIT TALK SHOW ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


PARADE

X

SUNDAY X

F∏EEBIE to pay the bills!” he says. “I don’t think about retiring. I think about how I can keep singing for the rest of my life. I just have to pace myself.” For a list of upcoming tour dates, go to Parade.com/mathis.

P Julia Roberts

Q: Is that Julia Roberts’s

ENTER FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN a Lawrence of Arabia 50th Anniversary Limited Edition Four-Disc Collector’s Gift Set at Parade.com/win

voice I hear in the new Nationwide commercial? —G. Allen, Cross Plains, Wis.

A: Good ear! Roberts’s

voice turns out to be as recognizable as her megawatt smile. “She was the perfect fit because she has a familiar voice that brings our brand character to life,” says a rep for the insurance company. The actress, 45, joins a long line of celebrities who’ve read copy for various ad campaigns. Uncover more voiceovers at Parade.com/ad.

P Housewife Kyle Richards

Q: On the Real House-

WALTER SCOTT ASKS …

Nampa, Idaho

Omar Sharif The legendary actor, 80, celebrates the 50th anniversary of his star-making role in Lawrence of Arabia (available on Blu-ray Nov. 13). How did the film affect your life? As an actor in Egypt,

I was nobody. It was extraordinary to suddenly become somebody in the world. I’ve never forgotten that.

P Johnny Mathis

Could you have ever imagined the success it achieved? I actually thought it would be a very boring film because there were no girls in it! I don’t know how [director] David Lean thought a three-and-a-half-hour film with only men and not a lot of action would do well, but it did.

Q: Does Johnny Mathis

How was filming with Peter O’Toole? We developed a

still perform? I’ve always loved his singing. —Suzie Schmick, Portland, Ore.

A: It’s been 56 years

since Mathis, 77, recorded his first hit song, “Wonderful! Wonderful!”—and the balladeer is still on the road. “I do just enough

wives series, are the dramatic trips taken by the cast members staged? —Kara Moore,

real friendship. When we first met, he said, “No one in the world is called Omar Sharif! I shall call you Fred,” and he called me Fred from then on. You were once ranked among the world’s best bridge players. Do you still play? No. I stopped playing

because I’m not as good as I used to be, and I didn’t want to be second best. Send your questions for Walter Scott to personality @parade.com or P.O. Box 5001, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10163-5001.

A: Beverly Hills star Kyle

Richards, 43, says the trips are discussed with production, but the ladies make their own travel plans, and the drama is 100 percent real. “Issues always come up. We shouldn’t travel together!” she says. What does she think of new Housewife Yolanda Foster (Bravo, Mondays)? Find out at wetpaint.com/rhobh.

fge

My husband and I have never seen Brian Williams wear a bad tie. Does he choose them himself? —Christine K., Stafford, Va.

“Believe it or not, I buy them myself!” says the 53-yearold host of NBC’s Rock Center. “Like all tie-wearing guys, I have my favorites. The way I figure it, if I wear a great tie, maybe it will attract attention away from my broken nose, which dates back to high school football.”

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES; EVERETT COLLECTION; IMEH AKPANUDOSEN/GETTY IMAGES; GARY GERSHOFF/WIREIMAGE; JASON DECROW/NBC/NBCU PHOTO BANK VIA GETTY IMAGES; STEPHEN LOVEKIN/GETTY IMAGES; JAMIE MCCARTHY/WIREIMAGE; ANDREW H. WALKER/GETTY IMAGES FOR PBS; PAUL WARNER/GETTY IMAGES

Walter Scott’s

2 • November 11, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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Parade CALLING ALL ONE DIRECTION FANS!

MAIL CALL Troops in Afghanistan with care packages from Operation Gratitude.

READ ALL ABOUT IT

VETERANS DAY Share your miles. With just a phone call or a few clicks, you can transfer frequent flier miles from many airlines to Fisher House Foundation’s “Hero Miles” program, which has provided more than 30,000 flights to service members and their loved ones traveling to VA hospitals. (fisherhouse.org)

1

Make a quilt for a child. Sign up with Operation Kid Comfort to receive fabric squares printed with photos from a family with a deployed service member; sew the squares into a quilt (it takes about 10 hours) and then mail your gift to a child who misses Mom or Dad. (asymca.org)

2

Want to say thank you? Here are four ways to show your appreciation to America’s vets and those still in uniform. Print out the DAV Rx Card. It’s free, available to anyone (regardless of your insurance), and every time you use the card at a participating pharmacy, 50 cents goes to Disabled American Veterans (DAV). Plus, it may help you save up to 75 percent on your prescriptions. (davrxcard.com)

3

Send leftover Halloween candy. Or a knitted scarf— or best of all, a handwritten letter. Operation Gratitude e is collecting these items and more to fill care packages for vets and activeduty troops (like those above) and their families. Visit operationgratitude .com to find a list of what to donate.

4

The books we cherish speak volumes about us, and the delightful new hardcover My Ideal Bookshelf offers a peek at those that have shaped the lives of dozens of celebrities, including rocker Patti Smith, writer Malcolm Gladwell, and skateboarder Tony Hawk, who says his choices (below) “are about pushing the boundaries of the mainstream.” Charmingly illustrated by Jane Mount, this is a book to savor and share.

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: COURTESY OF OPERATION GRATITUDE; C FLANIGAN/WIREIMAGE PH

If you’ve watched them on the Today show and you plan to download the new album, there’s only one thing left to do—enter for a chance to win a trip to New York to meet the band and see them in concert on Dec. 3 at Madison Square Garden. The winner will also take home a signed piece of their Teen Choice award! To enter and for official rules, go to Parade.com/onedirection.

4 • November 11, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


JANUVIA® SITAGLIPTIN TABLETS ARE WIDELY AVAILABLE ON MOST INSURANCE PLANS a See offer FREE below b .

Today, I took steps to balance my TYPE 2 DIABETES. Today, I chose exercise and talked to my doctor.

Actor Portrayal

JANUVIA works to lower blood sugar in 2 ways. Talk to your doctor about JANUVIA today. Increases Insulin

Decreases Sugar Made In Liver

s *!.56)! IS A ONCE DAILY PRESCRIPTION PILL THAT HELPS YOUR BODY INCREASE THE INSULIN MADE IN YOUR PANCREAS AND DECREASE THE SUGAR MADE IN YOUR LIVER s !LONG WITH DIET AND EXERCISE JANUVIA HELPS LOWER BLOOD SUGAR LEVELS IN ADULTS WITH TYPE DIABETES s "Y ITSELF *!.56)! IS NOT LIKELY TO CAUSE WEIGHT GAIN OR LOW BLOOD SUGAR HYPOGLYCEMIA

JANUVIA (jah-NEW-vee-ah) should not be used in patients with type 1 diabetes or with diabetic ketoacidosis (increased ketones in the blood or urine). If you have had pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas), it is not known if you have a higher chance of getting it while taking JANUVIA.

3ELECTED 2ISK )NFORMATION !BOUT *!.56)! Serious side effects can happen in people who take JANUVIA, including pancreatitis, which may be severe and lead to death. Before you start taking JANUVIA, tell your doctor if you’ve ever had pancreatitis. Stop taking JANUVIA and call your doctor right away if you have pain in your stomach area (abdomen) that is severe and will not go away. The pain may be felt going from your abdomen through to your back. The pain may happen with or without vomiting. These may be symptoms of pancreatitis. Do not take JANUVIA if you are allergic to any of its ingredients, including sitagliptin. Symptoms of serious allergic reactions to JANUVIA, including rash, hives, and swelling of the face, lips, tongue, and throat that may cause difficulty breathing or swallowing, can occur. If you have any symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, stop taking JANUVIA and call your doctor right away. a

Kidney problems, sometimes requiring dialysis, have been reported. If you take JANUVIA with another medicine that can cause low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), such as a sulfonylurea or insulin, your risk of getting low blood sugar is higher. The dose of your sulfonylurea medicine or insulin may need to be lowered while you use JANUVIA. Signs and symptoms of low blood sugar may include headache, drowsiness, weakness, dizziness, confusion, irritability, hunger, fast heartbeat, sweating, and feeling jittery. Your doctor may do blood tests before and during treatment with JANUVIA to see how well your kidneys are working. Based on these results, your doctor may change your dose of JANUVIA. The most common side effects of JANUVIA are upper respiratory tract infection, stuffy or runny nose and sore throat, and headache.

Call 1-888-JANUVIA or visit www.Januvia.com. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

Formulary data provided by Pinsonault Associates, LLC, April 2012.

0LEASE READ THE -EDICATION 'UIDE ON THE ADJACENT PAGE FOR MORE DETAILED INFORMATION Having trouble paying for your Merck medicine? Merck may be able to help. www.merck.com/merckhelps Copyright © 2012 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. All rights reserved. DIAB-1039462-0002 08/12

Terms and conditions apply. Please see next page.

Eligible patients may receive a free 30-day trial supply of JANUVIA® (sitagliptin) tablets. 1. Take this voucher to your next appointment. Ask your doctor about JANUVIA. 2. Get a free 30-day trial supply of JANUVIA if your doctor says it’s right for you. No purchase is required. Not valid for refills. JANUVIA is a prescription medication. Only your health care provider can decide if JANUVIA is right for you. How this voucher works: s 4HIS VOUCHER CAN BE USED TIME BEFORE THE EXPIRATION DATE

s

4O RECEIVE YOUR FREE DAY TRIAL SUPPLY OF *!.56)!

TAKE THIS VOUCHER WITH YOUR VALID SIGNED PRESCRIPTION TO ANY PARTICIPATING

eligible retail pharmacy (certain restrictions apply). s 4HERE IS NO REQUIREMENT TO PURCHASE ANY PRODUCT OR SERVICE TO RECEIVE YOUR FREE DAY TRIAL SUPPLY OF *!.56)! s 2ESTRICTIONS APPLY Please see Terms and Conditions on the back of this voucher. s Expiration Date: 06/30/2013 Prescriber 4O INITIATE A FREE DAY TRIAL SUPPLY FOR AN APPROPRIATE PATIENT

YOU SHOULD s Read the Prescribing Information before prescribing JANUVIA. s 7RITE A PRESCRIPTION FOR UP TO TABLETS OF *!.56)! .O SUBSTITUTIONS ARE PERMITTED s

2El LLS ARE NOT REQUIRED AND THERE ARE NO REQUIREMENTS TO PURCHASE ANY PRODUCT OR SERVICE TO USE THIS VOUCHER )F YOU WANT

YOUR PATIENT TO CONTINUE TAKING *!.56)! BEYOND THE FREE TRIAL PERIOD

PLEASE WRITE A SEPARATE PRESCRIPTION BASED ON YOUR

recommended therapy. s &ILL IN THE DOSE ON THIS VOUCHER s 'IVE THE VALID SIGNED PRESCRIPTION AND THIS VOUCHER TO THE PATIENT Copyright © 2012 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. All rights reserved.

Dose _____mg Offer valid for up to 30 tablets. s

%LIGIBLE PATIENTS CAN TAKE THIS VOUCHER AND THE PRESCRIPTION TO ANY PARTICIPATING ELIGIBLE RETAIL PHARMACY TO RECEIVE THEIR FREE

DAY TRIAL SUPPLY

s

&OR ADDITIONAL COPIES OF THE 0RESCRIBING )NFORMATION

CALL

VISIT WWW JANUVIA COM

OR CONTACT YOUR -ERCK

representative. Pharmacist s /NLY VOUCHER MAY BE USED PER PATIENT 6OUCHER MAY NOT BE TRANSFERRED TO ANOTHER PATIENT s 4HERE IS NO REQUIREMENT FOR PATIENT TO PURCHASE ANY PRODUCT OR SERVICE AND REl LLS ARE NOT REQUIRED s

0LEASE ENSURE THAT THE MEDICATION AND DOSAGE STRENGTH SELECTED MATCH THE MEDICATION AND DOSAGE STRENGTH ON THE

prescription. s

Submit claim to McKesson Corporation using BIN No. 610524. For pharmacy processing questions, please call the Help Desk at 800-657-7613. s &OR ALL OTHER PRESCRIPTIONS

PLEASE USE THE PATIENT S PRIMARY METHOD OF PAYMENT AND A NEW 2X NUMBER

s

"Y PROCESSING THIS VOUCHER

YOU AGREE THAT NO CLAIM FOR PAYMENT OR REIMBURSEMENT MAY BE SUBMITTED FOR THE FREE TRIAL

SUPPLY TO ANY PATIENT OR ANY THIRD PARTY PAYER

INCLUDING FEDERAL OR STATE HEALTH CARE PROGRAMS -EDICAID

-EDICARE

;INCLUDING TRUE OUT OF POCKET EXPENSE [4R//0]=

OR ANY OTHER STATE OR FEDERAL MEDICAL OR PHARMACEUTICAL BENEl T OR

PHARMACEUTICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM

PRIVATE INSURERS

AND HEALTH OR PHARMACY BENEl T PLANS

s

&OR AUDITING PURPOSES

A COPY OF THIS VOUCHER MUST BE ATTACHED TO THE ORIGINAL PRESCRIPTION AND RETAINED BY THE PHARMACY

-C+ESSON #ORPORATION RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REVIEW ALL RECORDS AND DOCUMENTATION RELATING TO THE DISPENSING OF PRODUCT s "Y ACCEPTING THIS VOUCHER

YOU AGREE TO THE TERMS HEREOF s No universal claim forms will be processed.

RxBIN No: 610524

RxPCN: 1016

RxGroup: 40026500

Issuer: (80840)

THIS VOUCHER IS NOT INSURANCE.

b

ID: 061660358

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Medication Guide JANUVIAÂŽ (jah-NEW-vee-ah) (sitagliptin) Tablets Read this Medication Guide carefully before you start taking JANUVIA and each time you get a refill. There may be new information. This information does not take the place of talking with your doctor about your medical condition or your treatment. If you have any questions about JANUVIA, ask your doctor or pharmacist. What is the most important information I should know about JANUVIA? Serious side effects can happen in people taking JANUVIA, including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) which may be severe and lead to death. Certain medical problems make you more likely to get pancreatitis. Before you start taking JANUVIA: Tell your doctor if you have ever had s PANCREATITIS s STONES IN YOUR GALLBLADDER GALLSTONES s A HISTORY OF ALCOHOLISM s HIGH BLOOD TRIGLYCERIDE LEVELS s KIDNEY PROBLEMS Stop taking JANUVIA and call your doctor right away if you have pain in your stomach area (abdomen) that is severe and will not go away. The pain may be felt going from your abdomen through to your back. The pain may happen with or without vomiting. These may be symptoms of pancreatitis. What is JANUVIA? s *!.56)! IS A PRESCRIPTION MEDICINE USED ALONG WITH DIET AND EXERCISE TO LOWER BLOOD SUGAR IN ADULTS WITH type 2 diabetes. s *!.56)! IS NOT FOR PEOPLE WITH TYPE DIABETES s *!.56)! IS NOT FOR PEOPLE WITH DIABETIC KETOACIDOSIS INCREASED KETONES IN YOUR BLOOD OR URINE s )F YOU HAVE HAD PANCREATITIS INmAMMATION OF THE PANCREAS IN THE PAST IT IS NOT KNOWN IF YOU HAVE A HIGHER chance of getting pancreatitis while you take JANUVIA. s )T IS NOT KNOWN IF *!.56)! IS SAFE AND EFFECTIVE WHEN USED IN CHILDREN UNDER YEARS OF AGE Who should not take JANUVIA? Do not take JANUVIA if: s YOU ARE ALLERGIC TO ANY OF THE INGREDIENTS IN *!.56)! 3EE THE END OF THIS -EDICATION 'UIDE FOR A COMPLETE LIST OF ingredients in JANUVIA. Symptoms of a serious allergic reaction to JANUVIA may include: s RASH s RAISED RED PATCHES ON YOUR SKIN HIVES s SWELLING OF THE FACE LIPS TONGUE AND THROAT THAT MAY CAUSE DIFlCULTY IN BREATHING OR SWALLOWING What should I tell my doctor before taking JANUVIA? Before you take JANUVIA, tell your doctor if you: s HAVE OR HAVE HAD INmAMMATION OF YOUR PANCREAS PANCREATITIS s HAVE KIDNEY PROBLEMS s HAVE ANY OTHER MEDICAL CONDITIONS s ARE PREGNANT OR PLAN TO BECOME PREGNANT )T IS NOT KNOWN IF *!.56)! WILL HARM YOUR UNBORN BABY )F YOU ARE pregnant, talk with your doctor about the best way to control your blood sugar while you are pregnant. Pregnancy Registry: If you take JANUVIA at any time during your pregnancy, talk with your doctor about how you can join the JANUVIA pregnancy registry. The purpose of this registry is to collect information about the health of you and your BABY 9OU CAN ENROLL IN THIS REGISTRY BY CALLING s ARE BREAST FEEDING OR PLAN TO BREAST FEED )T IS NOT KNOWN IF *!.56)! WILL PASS INTO YOUR BREAST MILK 4ALK WITH YOUR doctor about the best way to feed your baby if you are taking JANUVIA. Tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, INCLUDING PRESCRIPTION AND NON PRESCRIPTION MEDICINES VITAMINS and herbal supplements. Know the medicines you take. Keep a list of your medicines and show it to your doctor and pharmacist when you get a new medicine. How should I take JANUVIA? s 4AKE *!.56)! TIME EACH DAY EXACTLY AS YOUR DOCTOR TELLS YOU s 9OU CAN TAKE *!.56)! WITH OR WITHOUT FOOD s Take JANUVIA tablets whole. Do not split, crush, or chew JANUVIA tablets before swallowing. If you cannot

swallow JANUVIA tablets whole tell your doctor.

s 9OUR DOCTOR MAY DO BLOOD TESTS FROM TIME TO TIME TO SEE HOW WELL YOUR KIDNEYS ARE WORKING 9OUR DOCTOR MAY change your dose of JANUVIA based on the results of your blood tests. s 9OUR DOCTOR MAY TELL YOU TO TAKE *!.56)! ALONG WITH OTHER DIABETES MEDICINES ,OW BLOOD SUGAR CAN HAPPEN MORE OFTEN when JANUVIA is taken with certain other diabetes medicines. See “What are the possible side effects of JANUVIA?�. s )F YOU MISS A DOSE TAKE IT AS SOON AS YOU REMEMBER )F YOU DO NOT REMEMBER UNTIL IT IS TIME FOR YOUR NEXT DOSE skip the missed dose and go back to your regular schedule. Do not take two doses of JANUVIA at the same time. s )F YOU TAKE TOO MUCH *!.56)! CALL YOUR DOCTOR OR LOCAL 0OISON #ONTROL #ENTER RIGHT AWAY s 7HEN YOUR BODY IS UNDER SOME TYPES OF STRESS SUCH AS FEVER TRAUMA SUCH AS A CAR ACCIDENT INFECTION OR surgery, the amount of diabetes medicine that you need may change. Tell your doctor right away if you have any of these conditions and follow your doctor’s instructions. s #HECK YOUR BLOOD SUGAR AS YOUR DOCTOR TELLS YOU TO

s 3TAY ON YOUR PRESCRIBED DIET AND EXERCISE PROGRAM WHILE TAKING *!.56)! s 4ALK TO YOUR DOCTOR ABOUT HOW TO PREVENT RECOGNIZE AND MANAGE LOW BLOOD SUGAR HYPOGLYCEMIA HIGH BLOOD sugar (hyperglycemia), and problems you have because of your diabetes. s 9OUR DOCTOR WILL CHECK YOUR DIABETES WITH REGULAR BLOOD TESTS INCLUDING YOUR BLOOD SUGAR LEVELS AND YOUR HEMOGLOBIN ! # What are the possible side effects of JANUVIA? Serious side effects have happened in people taking JANUVIA. s 3EE “What is the most important information I should know about JANUVIA?�. s Low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). If you take JANUVIA with another medicine that can cause low blood sugar, such as a sulfonylurea or insulin, your risk of getting low blood sugar is higher. The dose of your sulfonylurea medicine or insulin may need to be lowered while you use JANUVIA. Signs and symptoms of low blood sugar may include: s HEADACHE s IRRITABILITY s DROWSINESS s HUNGER s WEAKNESS s FAST HEART BEAT s DIZZINESS s SWEATING s CONFUSION s FEELING JITTERY s Serious allergic reactions. If you have any symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, stop taking JANUVIA and call your doctor right away. See “Who should not take JANUVIA?�. Your doctor may give you a medicine for your allergic reaction and prescribe a different medicine for your diabetes. s Kidney problems, sometimes requiring dialysis The most common side effects of JANUVIA include: s UPPER RESPIRATORY INFECTION s STUFFY OR RUNNY NOSE AND SORE THROAT s HEADACHE JANUVIA may have other side effects, including: s STOMACH UPSET AND DIARRHEA s SWELLING OF THE HANDS OR LEGS WHEN *!.56)! IS USED WITH ROSIGLITAZONE !VANDIAŽ 2OSIGLITAZONE IS ANOTHER TYPE of diabetes medicine. These are not all the possible side effects of JANUVIA. For more information, ask your doctor or pharmacist. Tell your doctor if you have any side effect that bothers you, is unusual or does not go away. #ALL YOUR DOCTOR FOR MEDICAL ADVICE ABOUT SIDE EFFECTS 9OU MAY REPORT SIDE EFFECTS TO &$! AT &$! How should I store JANUVIA? 3TORE *!.56)! AT  & TO  &  # TO  # Keep JANUVIA and all medicines out of the reach of children. General information about the use of JANUVIA Medicines are sometimes prescribed for purposes that are not listed in Medication Guides. Do not use JANUVIA for a condition for which it was not prescribed. Do not give JANUVIA to other people, even if they have the same symptoms you have. It may harm them. 4HIS -EDICATION 'UIDE SUMMARIZES THE MOST IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT *!.56)! )F YOU WOULD LIKE TO KNOW MORE information, talk with your doctor. You can ask your doctor or pharmacist for additional information about JANUVIA that is written for health professionals. For more information, go to www.JANUVIA.com OR CALL What are the ingredients in JANUVIA? Active ingredient: sitagliptin. Inactive ingredients: microcrystalline cellulose, anhydrous dibasic calcium phosphate, croscarmellose sodium, magnesium stearate, and sodium stearyl fumarate. The tablet film coating contains the following inactive ingredients: POLYVINYL ALCOHOL POLYETHYLENE GLYCOL TALC TITANIUM DIOXIDE RED IRON OXIDE AND YELLOW IRON OXIDE What is type 2 diabetes? Type 2 diabetes is a condition in which your body does not make enough insulin, and the insulin that your body PRODUCES DOES NOT WORK AS WELL AS IT SHOULD 9OUR BODY CAN ALSO MAKE TOO MUCH SUGAR 7HEN THIS HAPPENS SUGAR (glucose) builds up in the blood. This can lead to serious medical problems. (IGH BLOOD SUGAR CAN BE LOWERED BY DIET AND EXERCISE AND BY CERTAIN MEDICINES WHEN NECESSARY

Manufactured by: Merck Sharp & Dohme (Italia) S.p.A. 6IA %MILIA n 0AVIA )TALY OR -%2#+ 3(!20 $/(-% ,4$ #RAMLINGTON .ORTHUMBERLAND 5+ .% *5 53 0ATENT .OS AND AvandiaŽ IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF 'LAXO3MITH+LINE #OPYRIGHT Š -ERCK 3HARP $OHME #ORP A SUBSIDIARY OF Merck & Co., Inc. All rights reserved 2EVISED 53-' 4 2 This Medication Guide has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

DIAB-1039462-0002 08/12

Terms and Conditions • This voucher is valid for 1 free 30-day trial supply of JANUVIA. • Limit 1 voucher per patient for the duration of the program. • Valid for 1-time use only. Free trial offer is valid only for up to 30 tablets of JANUVIA. No purchase is necessary. ReďŹ lls are not required. • This voucher is not transferable. No substitutions are permitted. Cannot be combined with any other free trial, coupon, discount, prescription savings card, or other offer. • This voucher is not insurance. • You must be 18 years or older to redeem this voucher. Patient, pharmacist, and prescriber agree not to seek reimbursement for all or any part of the beneďŹ t received by the patient through this offer. The free trial supply of JANUVIA cannot be used toward any out-of-pocket costs under any plan (such as true out-of-pocket expense [TrOOP]). • This voucher can be used only by eligible US residents at any participating eligible retail pharmacy in the United States. Product must originate in the United States. • This voucher is the property of Merck and must be turned in on request. • Merck reserves the right to rescind, revoke, or amend this offer at any time without notice. • It is illegal to sell, purchase, trade, or counterfeit this voucher. Void if reproduced. Void where prohibited by law, taxed, or restricted. • Please read the accompanying Medication Guide and discuss it with your doctor. Also available is the physician Prescribing Information. • Expiration Date: 06/30/2013

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HAVE AN APPY THANKSGIVING! Epicurious can help you plan your feast with hundreds of Turkey Day recipes. ZipList can turn your menu into a shareable shopping list annotated with deals at local grocers (enter recipes online or clip from the Web). And Thanksgiving Coloring Book can keep the kiddies busy with messfree virtual fingerpainting while you cook. (Free; Android, iPad, and iPhone)

PHOTO: JAMES BALOG/EXTREME ICE SURVEY

You can help raise this amount during American Diabetes Month by sharing a personal photo, via Facebook, that captures what living with the disease means to you or a loved one—the worries, the dedication, the trials, and the triumphs. The pictures will be used to create a mosaic that shows what this life-changing illness is really like. For every image uploaded, CVS/pharmacy will donate $1 to the American Diabetes Association, up to $25K. (diabetesmosaic.org)

©201 ©2 201 012 Di Disco scov sc co cov ov ve ery r C ry Comm om o mm m u unic uni iic cat ati a tiio ons n

DISAPPEARING ACTS Get breathtakingly close to endangered species and landscapes in two documentary projects. The series Frontier Earth Presented by Walmart (Animal Planet, premieres Nov. 13) highlights elusive wildlife like orcas and Komodo dragons; the prizewinning Chasing Ice (in theaters this month) provides striking evidence of global warming in places like Greenland’s ice sheet (above).

$25,000

from page 4

Parade

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BY ERIN HILL

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Thanks BATALI Givin g c Mario

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As a father of two, how do you get kids involved with the preparations?

I always make sure my kids have set tasks. I have them peel onions and garlic, pick herbs; once they were old enough, around 7, I let them do easy knife work like cutting the ends of the celery. They really want to eat everything because they’ve helped make everything.

As the five hosts of The Chew prove, cooking up a hit talk show is like creating a memorable Thanksgiving: Take several cups of laughter, mix in a few spoonfuls of teasing, add a pinch of drama—and top with heaps of love hen a TV show boasts a cast full of foodies and a lineup dedicated to the art of eating (family-style meals! potluck parties!), a deli salad for lunch or a sandwich from craft services simply won’t do. And so on a recent fall day at the daytime talker The Chew, homemade lasagna is making the rounds backstage, whipped up by cohost Mario Batali, 52, he of orange Crocs–wearing, Gwyneth Paltrow–hanging, Italian cooking fame. “The first year, I didn’t moderate my eating habits at all, just ate the entire plate of food,” says Carla Hall, 48, a Top Chef finalist and The Chew’s dessert diva. “I gained 20 pounds!” • Hall has since learned to stick to only a few bites of the dishes prepared on set and off, and she’s not alone in making some adjustments. Meat lover Michael Symon, 43, a restaurateur and Iron Chef America star, credits healthy-eating author Daphne Oz, 26 (yes, the daughter of that Dr. Oz), for teaching him to put low-fat ingredients in his recipes; and fashion expert Clinton Kelly, 43, who also stars on What Not to Wear, has come to appreciate Batali’s, uh, unique style sense, which usually includes a fleece vest and colorful socks. “It works for him,” Kelly says. • The group’s chemistry is working, too: The show’s ratings are up in its second season, and a cookbook collaboration, The Chew: Food. Life. Fun., was an instant best seller. What do these kitchen gurus know that we don’t about throwing the perfect holiday get-together? Read on to find out.

W

COV E R P HOT O G R A PH BY M I L L E R MOB L E Y

From the moment I wake up, I plan out every 15 minutes, starting at 10 a.m. and going all the way up until service time. Everything has an in time, an out time, and a cut time. So if I’m serving at 4 p.m., I make sure the turkey is out at 3:15—it needs 45 minutes to rest and cool—and then I just go backward from there. Ever had a Thanksgiving kitchen disaster?

When my brother and I were in college, we were moving the turkey and dropped the whole thing—the stuffing exploded out of the bird! We quickly picked it back up. We thought that was our best turkey, and in subsequent years, we actually dropped a little stuffing on the floor just for good luck.

PHOTOS, INSIDE: KAT TEUTSCH FOR PARADE. ILLUSTRATIONS: RICCARDO VECCHIO

What’s your secret for minimizing holiday cooking stress?

8 • November 11, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


outside and a meat thermometer reads 165° at fattest part, about 1 hour (plus or minus 10 minutes). 7. Remove and allow to rest 15 minutes before carving. Add remaining 1 cup wine to roasting pan and deglaze, scraping with a wooden spoon. Cook for 5 minutes, then add remaining ¼ cup oil. Shake pan to emulsify sauce and season with salt and pepper. 8. Carve roast into ½-inch-thick slices and drizzle with pan sauce. Serve. PER SERVING: 560 cal, 14g carbs, 53g protein, 32g fat, 175mg chol, 310mg sodium, 2g fiber

LEFTOVERS IDEA #1

Batali suggests using your scraps for an Italian classic: turkey tortellini. Toss bits of turkey, sweet potato, mashed potatoes, celery, and carrots into a food processor. Fill 2-inch pasta squares with 1 tsp each of turkey mixture; fold in half to form triangles, bring 2 corners together, and press to seal. Drop into a pot of boiling turkey broth and cook until tender.

MARIO BATALI’S

STUFFED TURKEY Serves: At least 8 Total Time: 60–120 min

1 whole turkey breast (5–6 lb total), boned, halved, and butterflied by your butcher + Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper 3 Tbsp plus ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil ½ lb pancetta, cut into ½-inch pieces 1½ lb ground pork shoulder 12 chestnuts, roasted, peeled, and halved

10 prunes, pitted and quartered 2 cups fresh bread crumbs 1 cup Parmigiano-Reggiano, freshly grated 2 eggs 2 Tbsp freshly ground black pepper + Freshly grated nutmeg 1 Tbsp fresh rosemary, chopped 1 Tbsp sage, chopped 3 cups dry white wine 1. Pound butterflied breast halves to flatten, season with salt and pepper, and refrigerate overnight. 2. Preheat oven to 400°F. 3. In a 12- to 14-inch sauté pan, heat 3 Tbsp oil over medium-high until smoking. Add pancetta and cook until golden brown, 7 to 9 minutes. Add pork and cook for 25 minutes or until

it starts to brown, stirring regularly. 4. Drain all but 4 Tbsp fat from pan and add chestnuts and prunes. Continue cooking for 8 minutes or until prunes start to soften. Remove from heat and allow to cool for about 20 minutes. 5. Add bread crumbs, Parmigiano, eggs, 2 Tbsp pepper, nutmeg, and herbs and mix well with your hands. (Overmixing can result in a lead torpedo for stuffing, so do not overdo it.) Place turkey breasts on a cutting board, skin side down, and divide stuffing between them. Roll each breast like a jelly roll and tie firmly in several places with butcher’s twine. Place on a rack in a roasting pan, skin side up. 6. Pour 2 cups wine over turkey and season with salt and pepper. Roast until breasts are dark golden brown

Michael

SYMON Okay—help me pick the perfect turkey.

I think a pound a person is a pretty good rule. I like to stay in the 10-to-12-pound range. Sometimes people get these 16-, 18-, 20-pound turkeys, and they end up drying out more when

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


How do you juggle making multiple dishes for so many people?

Most of my prep is done the night before. I try to get a lot of the casserole sides pretty much done first—before I even put the turkey in— because I can always put those in at the end to finish them or reheat them. So the casserole sides go in until they’re almost

done; then they come out and the turkey goes in; then I do all my stove-top work while it’s cooking. Then when the bird comes out, the casserole dishes go back in to finish, and by the time the bird’s rested, they’re done and we serve. Whew! Sounds exhausting. How do you unwind after?

By watching football on the couch with my 94-year-old grandfather, my dad, and my son, all of us falling asleep within 15 minutes. Four drooling men on the couch!

PER SERVING: 150 cal, 6g carbs, 2g protein, 14g fat, 0mg chol, 130mg sodium, 2g fiber

MICHAEL SYMON’S

BRUSSELS SPROUTS WITH WALNUTS AND CAPERS Serves: 5 Total Time: 10 min

+ Canola oil, for deep-frying ½ serrano chile, seeded and minced 1½ tsp honey 2 Tbsp red wine vinegar 1 Tbsp extra-virgin olive oil ½ lb brussels sprouts, trimmed and quartered + Salt and pepper 1 Tbsp capers ¼ cup walnut pieces, toasted 1. Fill a medium pot two-thirds full of canola oil. Heat to 350°F. 2. While oil is heating, whisk together chile, honey, vinegar, and olive oil in a bowl large enough to toss all brussels sprouts. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Keep bowl near stove top. 3. Fry brussels sprouts until edges begin to curl and brown, 2 to 3 minutes. Carefully add capers and stand back (they tend to splatter). Fry 1 minute. Transfer brussels sprouts and capers to bowl; mix to coat. Add salt and pepper to taste and toss in toasted walnuts.

LEFTOVERS IDEA #2

If you wake up hungry the morning after the big Thanksgiving feast, try Symon’s holiday twist on an old brunch staple, eggs Benedict. To make a single serving, fry one of your extra sweet potatoes until it’s crisp, then top with turkey slices, a poached egg, and hollandaise sauce.

Whether it’s cranberry sauce (Carla’s pick) or stuffing (Mario’s), everyone has a favorite side dish at the Thanksgiving table. Vote for yours at Parade.com/chew ● CANDIED YAMS ● CRANBERRY SAUCE ● GREEN BEAN CASSEROLE ● MASHED POTATOES ● STUFFING

Daphne

OZ Help! How can people avoid a holiday weight gain?

Remember that [your calorie intake] balances out over three days. So don’t eat a ton the day before and don’t eat a ton the day after, and enjoy your full [Thanksgiving] meal. I definitely have pie! Any other guilty pleasures?

Corn pudding. I know it’s terrible for me. It has, like, two sticks of butter and two containers of sour cream, but it’s just delicious! (Get Daphne’s corn pudding recipe at Parade .com/chew.) Share with us one of your favorite family traditions.

We play a huge game of Oz family football before the meal to get us out of my mom and grandma’s way, but also to work up an appetite. After the meal, it’s naptime, and when we wake up, it’s old movies and popcorn. >

COVER: PROP STYLING, ERIN SWIFT; WARDROBE, FRAN TAYLOR; HAIR, JEANNA MIRANTE; MAKEUP, GABRIELLA VOIGT. INSIDE: PROP STYLING, MICHELLE WONG; FOOD STYLING, FRANK MENTESANA NUTRITION CONSULTING/ANALYSIS: JEANINE SHERRY, M.S., R.D.

you cook them. If you have a lot of guests, you’re better off doing several smaller turkeys, not one large one.

10 • November 11, 2012

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Thanksgiving | from page 10 DAPHNE OZ’S

MUSHROOM AND VEGETABLE STUFFING Serves: 4–6 Total Time: 30–60 min

½ loaf multigrain bread, torn into bite-size pieces 1 Tbsp extra-virgin olive oil 1 shallot, finely chopped 1 celery stalk, chopped fine ½ lb shiitake mushrooms, chopped, stems removed 1 bunch kale, cut into ribbons, stems removed 1 Granny Smith apple, cored and diced ¹⁄3 cup parsley leaves, minced 1 Tbsp fresh thyme leaves, minced 1 Tbsp fresh sage leaves, minced 1 clove garlic, minced ¾ cup coarsely chopped walnuts 2 cups vegetable broth + Salt and pepper

1. Preheat oven to 400°F. 2. On a baking sheet, bake bread bits until crunchy, about 10 minutes. 3. Heat oil in a nonstick skillet over medium. Add shallot, celery, mushrooms, and kale. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring; add apple once shallot is soft. Cook 5 minutes or until apple is soft. Add parsley, thyme, sage, and garlic. Cook 1 minute or until fragrant; remove from heat and mix in bread and walnuts. 4. Add broth until moist. Cover with foil and bake 25 minutes. Remove foil and bake 10 minutes or until very hot. Add salt and pepper to taste. (Tip: In turkey, use less broth.)

PER SERVING: 350 cal, 47g carbs, 11g protein, 14g fat, 0mg chol, 430mg sodium, 6g fiber

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are the things that make an interesting tabletop. You need a pop of color; some texture, like woven place mats; a little bit of print or pattern, like in a napkin; and then shine, like great candles. Any tips for being a stellar host?

Clinton

KELLY What’s the best way to set a holiday table?

The same components that go into an interesting outfit— color, texture, pattern, shine—

Designate someone as your second in command! That person should make sure everyone’s being entertained, the wine glasses are full, and everyone’s out of the kitchen during the hour before dinner is served. Fill in the blank: It wouldn’t be Thanksgiving without …

One minor family drama! There’s always one little comment that someone takes the wrong way. >

12 • November 11, 2012

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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Thanksgiving | from page 12

The #1 dishwasher is also a best value. Bosch quality and value are confirmed by a leading consumer publication. CLINTON KELLY’S

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Filling: 5 Granny Smith apples, peeled and chopped 1 cup cranberries ¼ cup granulated sugar ¼ cup brown sugar ½ tsp ground cinnamon ¹⁄8 tsp ground nutmeg 2 tsp cornstarch + Juice of 1 lemon + Generous pinch of salt 8 Tbsp butter Topping: ¾ cup milk 1 cup all-purpose flour ½ cup sugar 2 tsp baking soda 2 pinches of salt

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1. Preheat oven to 350°F. 2. In a large bowl, toss together filling ingredients, except butter. In a separate bowl, whisk topping ingredients. 3. Add butter to a 9-inch pie dish and place in oven until melted. Remove from oven and fill with fruit mixture. Pour topping over fruit filling. 4. Bake for 1 hour or until juices are bubbling and cobbler is golden. Tent with foil if cobbler is getting too brown. PER SERVING: 340 cal, 58g carbs, 3g protein, 12g fat, 30mg chol, 500mg sodium, 3g fiber

14 • November 11, 2012

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CARLA HALL’S

What do you find challenging about hosting?

Carla

HALL

People wanting to help out in the kitchen during that last hour. You almost need to have a list of things for them to do outside of the kitchen—“My mother wants to help, so maybe I can have her hang my shower curtain!”

PUMPKIN BEIGNETS WITH CARAMEL DIPPING SAUCE Serves: 6–8 Total Time: Up to 30 min

½ cup pumpkin or butternut squash, finely shredded ½ cup tart apple, finely diced

2 tsp brown sugar 2 tsp ground cinnamon, divided ½ tsp ground nutmeg ½ tsp ground ginger ½ tsp salt, divided 1 tsp grated lemon or lime zest ½ cup all-purpose flour ½ tsp baking powder ¼ cup water ¼ cup whole milk ¼ cup butter, cut into ½-inch cubes 3 eggs

+ Canola oil ¼ cup confectioners’ sugar Caramel dipping sauce: 1 cup granulated sugar 6 Tbsp unsalted butter ½ cup sour cream 2 tsp kosher salt 1. Place shredded pumpkin in a towel and roll tightly, wringing out to extract as much liquid as possible. In a bowl, combine pumpkin, apple, brown sugar, 1 tsp cinnamon, nutmeg, >

Do you have any postmeal traditions?

Games! My husband, Matthew, and I took an acting class together, so there are all these acting exercises we drag our family through. There’s one where you take cards and write an adjective and a profession on each. Then everyone draws a card and pretends to meet at a bus stop in character, and you have to guess who everyone is. It’s so much fun.

Describe the perfect dessert table.

You should have two pies, a cake, and a few smaller things for people to pick up, like cookies, cupcakes, or brownies. You can get the kids to help you decorate cupcakes or cookies, but don’t get too stuck on making them look perfect because the idea is that the kids have made them. PER SERVING: 410 cal, 40g carbs, 4g protein, 27g fat, 115mg chol, 810mg sodium, 1g fiber

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


Thanksgiving | from page 15 ginger, ¼ tsp salt, and lemon or lime zest. Set aside. 2. Combine flour, ¼ tsp salt, and baking powder. Set aside. In a medium saucepan, combine water, milk, and butter. Melt butter and bring mixture to a simmer. Add flour mixture and stir until smooth. Cook until mixture doesn’t stick to fingers when pinched. Let cool. 3. Add eggs one at a time and mix until smooth. Stir in spiced pumpkin mixture. (Batter may be made up to 24 hours ahead. Mixture will be loose.) 4. Heat oil in a deep pot to 350°F or use a deep fryer (fill two-thirds full with oil). Using a small scoop or 2 spoons, scoop batter into fryer in small batches. Dough should rise to top of oil. Flip or turn in oil to brown on all sides. With a slotted spoon, remove beignets from pot. Drain on paper towels. Sprinkle with remaining 1 tsp cinnamon mixed with confectioners’ sugar. Serve alone or with sauce. For caramel dipping sauce: 1. Heat sugar on medium-high in a heavy-bottomed 3-quart saucepan. As soon as sugar begins to melt, stir vigorously with a whisk or wooden spoon. When sugar comes to a boil, stop stirring. 2. After sugar crystals have melted (and sugar is dark amber in color), immediately add butter to pan. Whisk until butter has melted, then remove from heat. 3. Slowly add sour cream and salt and continue whisking until incorporated. Whisk until caramel is smooth. Let cool in pan for a couple of minutes before pouring into a mason jar. Let cool to room temperature. Store in fridge for up to 2 weeks. Warm before serving.

LEFTOVERS IDEA #3

Turn your dinner into a salad! For croutons, Hall cuts excess cornbread stuffing into small cubes, then bakes them until lightly browned before tossing over greens with cranberries and turkey.

16 • November 11, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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Leather Leaf Tags Your front yard can yield unlimited patterns for these leaf-shaped bag tags.

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1. Paint wooden balls; turn an egg carton over and use as a stand where they can dry. Then add a second coat. Set aside. 2. Using a craft knife or screwdriver, gently separate caps from acorns. 3. Once paint has dried, sand one end of each wooden ball to flatten. Glue caps over sanded areas.

SUPPLIES: Leaves or leaf eaf images from the Web (the tags ags shown above are about 4½ inches hes long); sharp scissors; glue stick; leather scraps in autumn colors (available lable at Michael’s or other craft or fabric ic stores); large nail and hammer; beaded ball chain with fastener, about 6 inches long (available at craft stores); rubber alphabet stamps; stamp pads

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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Pinecone Bookmarks Give a book to a friend for the holidays and add a cute autumn-inspired bookmark. Or use as party favors on your Thanksgiving table. SUPPLIES: Awl or other sharp

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tool (like a metal kebab skewer); baby pinecone; ½ yard of 3 ⁄8-inch-wide grosgrain ribbon; hot glue gun; toothpick; scissors 1. Use awl or skewer to gently “drill” a small hole into base of pinecone.

nd of ribbon 2. Roll one end humb and index between your thumb row. finger to make narrow. ue inside 3. Apply a dab of hot glue ibb hole. Poke narrow end of ribbon into hole, using skewer or a toothpick. Let glue dry. Trim ribbon at an angle to about 13 inches. As a variation, use an acorn. Pry acorn cap from body with a craft knife. Make a small hole in cap using skewer. Thread ribbon through hole and knot it on underside of cap. Trim excess ribbon. Glue acorn body back onto cap. Turn cookies and leftover candy corn into a fun Thanksgiving treat to make with the kids. Watch the how-to video at dashrecipes.com/turkeypops

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November 11, 2012 • 19

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Kennections By Ken Jennings HOW TO PLAY

All five correct answers have something in common. Can you figure out what it is?

1. In the title of a 1981 album, AC/DC salutes all those who are about to do what?

✎ 2. According to the FBI, more bank robberies occur on what day of the week than any other?

✎ 3. What 16-inch curved tube used by divers derives its name from a breathing apparatus on old German U-boats?

✎ 4. Prince Andrew is the duke (and his ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, the duchess) of the dukedom named for what city in England?

✎ 5. What is the world’s most traded spice, accounting for about 20 percent of the global spice market?

✎ WHAT’S THE “KENNECTION” BETWEEN ALL FIVE ANSWERS?

Make Online Kennections! Scan here for more trivia puzzles or visit Parade.com/ken

PHOTO: ANDY REYNOLDS

ANSWERS: 1. ROCK; 2. FRIDAY; 3. SNORKEL; 4. YORK; 5. PEPPER ALL ARE LAST NAMES OF WELL-KNOWN SERGEANTS

20 • November 11, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Healthy Stay

What If Grandpa Doesn’t Really Have Alzheimer’s? There’s a condition that often masquerades as dementia, with one difference—it’s treatable

immy Nowell of Clifton, Tex., had always been a top-notch salesman. Locals in search of auto parts knew he could get them exactly what they needed. But in 2000, when he was 59, Nowell’s speech, along with his walking, started slowing. Sometimes he needed a cane. Later, he became disorganized, losing his train of thought or turning on the computer and freezing, not knowing what to do. In 2005, he lost his job as a result of his behavior. Still, Nowell and his wife, Ann, just chalked up the symptoms to old age. Then in 2007, Nowell started blanking on Ann’s name. In a panic, she dragged her husband to doctor after doctor, but no one could agree on a diagnosis. One specialist thought Nowell had Parkinson’s disease; another said it was Alzheimer’s. Finally, in 2009, Nowell’s condition was correctly identified when a neurologist took an MRI and compared it to a baseline image taken a few years earlier: Nowell had normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), a condition that occurs when the clear fluid surrounding the brain fails to be reabsorbed, eventually leading to problems with

J

AT’S WH HIER T L A HE

?

D i Drinking a glass of wine or beer?

Moderate consumption of alcohol— whether it’s beer, wine, or a shot of tequila—has been found to guard against heart disease, improve cholesterol levels, and even boost cognitive function. But in terms of additional benefits, you might be surprised to learn that beer comes out on top, according to Andrea Giancoli, R.D., spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. Wine contains the antioxidant resveratrol, but, says Giancoli, “You’d need to drink much more than a glass or two of wine [a day] to obtain enough to be beneficial.” Meanwhile, compared to wine, “beer contains more B vitamins, including folate and niacin, plus silicon, which is associated with better bone health. Moderate beer consumption also seems to lower the risk of kidney stones in men. It’s even got a little bit of fiber!”

memory, as well as bladder control and walking (one of the distinguishing signs is a disturbed gait). The symptoms creep up slowly at first—and when the condition is brought to a doctor’s attention, it’s often misdiagnosed. “About 30 percent of my [NPH] patients were told they had Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s,” says Mark Luciano, M.D., neurosurgery director at Cleveland Clinic. “Sometimes they were told they were just getting old.” As a result, it’s tough to know how prevalent NPH truly is, but the Hydrocephalus Association estimates that at least 350,000 Americans—and 5 percent of people with dementia— have the condition. A 2005

Virginia Commonwealth University paper estimated that 9 percent of patients in assisted-living facilities may have NPH. The good news is that unlike the vast majority of conditions that cause dementia, NPH can be treated by surgery to reduce pressure in the brain. The procedure is successful in 85 to 90 percent of NPH patients, as long as they have no complicating factors, like a spinal condition, says Michael Williams, M.D., director of Sinai Hospital’s Adult Hydrocephalus Center in Baltimore. For Nowell, news of a cure was welcome, but also frightening: A dimesize hole would be drilled into his skull and a shunt implanted to drain the excess fluid. Nevertheless, the Nowells decided to go forward with the surgery. Upon waking, Jimmy was able to walk without a cane for the first time in years. When his wife stepped off the elevator, he called out her name without hesitation, and she cried with joy. Jimmy was back. —Joanne Chen

BY THE NUMBERS

EXTRA MINUTES OF SLEEP A NIGHT LINKED TO BETTER CLASSROOM BEHAVIOR AMONG SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN. Source: Pediatrics

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: ISTOCKPHOTO (2); PHOTODISC/GETTY IMAGES

MISDIAGNOSED Jimmy Nowell (left) was told he had Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s before finally being diagnosed with NPH.

22 • November 11, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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† Humana is a stand-alone prescription drug plan with a Medicare contract. Other pharmacies are available in our network. The benefit information provided is a brief summary, not a complete description of benefits. For more information contact the plan. Limitations, copayments and restrictions may apply. Benefits, formulary, pharmacy network, premium and/or copayments/ coinsurance may change on January 1 of each year. You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. Medicare beneficiaries may enroll in the plan only during specific times of the year. Contact Humana for more information. You must use network pharmacies, except under non-routine circumstances. Actual savings may vary. Quantity limitations, copayments, and restrictions may apply. The “Spark” Design , Walmart and Save money. Live better. are marks and/or registered marks of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. © 2012 Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. This offer is made by Humana and all inquiries should be made to Humana at 1-800-844-1020. Y0040_GHHHDTLHH CMS Accepted

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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


By Anne Lamott

Counting Our Blessings No matter how you say it, grace can transform an ordinary meal into a celebration—of family, love, and gratitude

W

e didn’t say grace at our house when I was growing up because my parents were atheists. I knew even as a little girl that everyone at every table needed blessing and encouragement, but my family didn’t ask for it. Instead, my parents raised glasses of wine to the chef: Cheers. Dig in. But I had a terrible secret, which was that I believed in God, a divine presence who heard me when I prayed, who stayed close to me in the dark. So at 6 years old I began to infiltrate religious families like a spy—Mata Hari in plaid sneakers. One of my best friends was a Catholic girl. Her boisterous family bowed its collective head and said, “Bless us, O Lord, and these thy gifts. …” I was so hungry for these words; it was like a cool breeze, a polite thank-you note to God, the silky magnetic energy of gratitude. I still love that line. I believed that if your family said grace, it meant you were a happy family, all evidence to the contrary. But I saw at certain tables that an improvised grace could cause friction or discomfort. My friend Mark reports that at his big southern childhood Thanksgivings, someone always managed to say something that made poor Granny feel half dead. “It would be along the lines of ‘And Lord, we are just glad you have seen fit to keep Mama with us for one more year.’ We would

all strain to see Granny giving him the fisheye.” I noticed some families shortened the pro forma blessing so they could get right to the meal. If there were more males than females, it was a boy chant, said as one word: “GodisgreatGodisgoodletus thankHimforourfoodAmen.” I also noticed that grace usually wasn’t said if the kids were eating in front of the TV, as if God refused to listen over the sound of it. And we’ve all been held hostage by grace sayers who use the opportunity to work the room, like the

WE’RE ACKNOWLEDGING THAT THIS FOOD DIDN’T JUST APPEAR: SOMEONE GREW IT, GROUND IT, BOUGHT IT, BAKED IT; WOW.

Church Lady. But more often, people simply say thank you—we understand how far short we must fall, how selfish we can be, how selfrighteous, what brats. And yet God has given us this marvelous meal. It turns out that my two brothers and I all grew up to be middleaged believers. I’ve been a member of the same Presbyterian church for 27 years. My older brother became a born-again Christian— but don’t ask him to give the blessing, as it can last forever. I adore him, but your food will grow cold. My younger brother is an unconfirmed but freelance Catholic. So now someone at our holiday tables always ends up saying grace. I think we’re in it for the pause, the quiet thanks for love and for our blessings, before the shoveling begins. For a minute, our stations are tuned to a broader, richer radius. We’re acknowledging that this food didn’t just magically appear: Someone grew it, ground it, bought it, baked it; wow. We say thank you for the miracle that we have stuck together all these years, in spite of it all; that we have each other’s backs, and hilarious companionship. We say thank you for the plentiful and outrageous food: Kathy’s lox, Robby’s bûche de Noël. We pray to be mindful of the needs of others. We savor these moments out of time, when we are conscious of love’s presence, of Someone’s great abiding generosity to our dear and motley family, these holy moments of gratitude. And that is grace. Anne Lamott’s newest book, Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers, is out this month.

PHOTO: CAMERIQUE/CLASSICSTOCK/ROBERTSTOCK/AURORA PHOTOS

Views

24 • November 11, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


or to t Li de he m rs fi ite fro rst d m 25 th 00 is ad

Ask Marilyn By Marilyn vos Savant

The Beauty in the Beast

Spectacular Treasure from Mount St. Helens

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or almost a hundred years it lay dormant. Silently building strength. At 10,000 feet high, it was truly a sleeping giant, a vision of peaceful power. Until everything changed in one cataclysmic moment. On May 18, 1980, the onceslumbering beast awoke with violent force and revealed its greatest secret.

I’m a commercial pilot. From day one, all pilots are taught the importance of doing a thorough preflight check of the aircraft. This includes visually inspecting everything you can and exercising every switch, knob, and control in the cockpit. In its simplest form, a manual check may mean pushing a button and seeing that a light goes on. My question is this: Say the light goes on. Fine, but every part has a lifespan, including this button. It will work, say, 7,354 times and fail the 7,355th time. In other words, I know the part worked the last time I checked it, but this tells me nothing about the next time. So what am I accomplishing with this test? (Don’t get me wrong: I do all the required tests on my aircraft before each flight, but I sometimes wonder about them!) —David Naumann,

It was one of nature’s most impressive displays of power. Mount St. Helens erupted, sending a column of ash and smoke 80,000 feet into the atmosphere. From that chaos, something beautiful emerged… our spectacular Helenite Necklace. Produced from the heated volcanic rock dust of Mount St. Helens, this brilliant green creation has captured the attention of jewelry designers worldwide. Today you can wear this 6½-carat stunner for the exclusive price of only $129!

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As I see it, the test informs you about the past, not the future. When the light goes on, it tells you that nothing has gone wrong since the last time you flew that aircraft, when you walked away and left it in the care of others. So the reason you conduct the test is for that rare instance when the light doesn’t go on. This tells you something has changed since you last landed, and you can’t fly the craft again until you find out what happened and fix it. To ask a question, play this week’s Numbrix, and more, visit Parade.com/askmarilyn

ILLUSTRATION: GRAFILU

Your satisfaction is guaranteed. Our Helenite Necklace puts the gorgeous green stone center stage, with a faceted pearcut set in gold-layered .925 sterling silver. The explosive origins of the stone are echoed in the flashes of light that radiate as C. the piece swings gracefully from its 18" gold-plated sterling silver chain. Today the volcano sits quiet, but this unique piece of natural history continues to Add the earrings and ring to erupt with gorgeous green fire. complete the stunning look! Your satisfaction is guaranteed. Bring home the Helenite Necklace and see for yourself. If you are not completely blown away by the rare beauty of this exceptional stone, simply return the necklace within 30 days for a full refund of your purchase price.

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26 • November 11, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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5 out of 5 "VHVTU “For general computing tasks, you can’t go wrong with this one.” -DFADAMS

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All-In-One Desktop

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Dell™ Inspiron™ One 20

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Dell™ 21.5-inch Ultra Thin Monitor with LED backlight 5ISJMMJOH )% WJTVBMT JO B CFBVUJGVMMZ UIJO EFTJHO

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